View source: R/datasummary_crosstab.R
datasummary_crosstab | R Documentation |
Convenience function to tabulate counts, cell percentages, and row/column
percentages for categorical variables. See the Details section for a
description of the internal design. For more complex cross tabulations, use
datasummary directly. See the Details and Examples sections below,
and the vignettes on the modelsummary
website:
https://modelsummary.com/
https://modelsummary.com/articles/datasummary.html
datasummary_crosstab(
formula,
statistic = 1 ~ 1 + N + Percent("row"),
data,
output = "default",
fmt = 1,
title = NULL,
notes = NULL,
align = NULL,
add_columns = NULL,
add_rows = NULL,
sparse_header = TRUE,
escape = TRUE,
...
)
formula |
A two-sided formula to describe the table: rows ~ columns,
where rows and columns are variables in the data. Rows and columns may
contain interactions, e.g., |
statistic |
A formula of the form |
data |
A data.frame (or tibble) |
output |
filename or object type (character string)
|
fmt |
how to format numeric values: integer, user-supplied function, or
|
title |
string. Cross-reference labels should be added with Quarto or Rmarkdown chunk options when applicable. When saving standalone LaTeX files, users can add a label such as |
notes |
list or vector of notes to append to the bottom of the table. |
align |
A string with a number of characters equal to the number of columns in
the table (e.g.,
|
add_columns |
a data.frame (or tibble) with the same number of rows as your main table. |
add_rows |
a data.frame (or tibble) with the same number of columns as your main table. By default, rows are appended to the bottom of the table. You can define a "position" attribute of integers to set the row positions. See Examples section below. |
sparse_header |
TRUE or FALSE. TRUE eliminates column headers which
have a unique label across all columns, except for the row immediately above
the data. FALSE keeps all headers. The order in which terms are entered in
the formula determines the order in which headers appear. For example,
|
escape |
boolean TRUE escapes or substitutes LaTeX/HTML characters which could
prevent the file from compiling/displaying. |
... |
all other arguments are passed through to the table-making
functions tinytable::tt, kableExtra::kbl, gt::gt, DT::datatable, etc. depending on the |
datasummary_crosstab
is a wrapper around the datasummary
function. This wrapper works by creating a customized formula and by
feeding it to datasummary
. The customized formula comes in two parts.
First, we take a two-sided formula supplied by the formula
argument.
All variables of that formula are wrapped in a Factor()
call to ensure
that the variables are treated as categorical.
Second, the statistic
argument gives a two-sided formula which specifies
the statistics to include in the table. datasummary_crosstab
modifies
this formula automatically to include "clean" labels.
Finally, the formula
and statistic
formulas are combined into a single
formula which is fed directly to the datasummary
function to produce the
table.
Variables in formula
are automatically wrapped in Factor()
.
The behavior of modelsummary
can be modified by setting global options. For example:
options(modelsummary_model_labels = "roman")
The rest of this section describes each of the options above.
These global option changes the style of the default column headers:
options(modelsummary_model_labels = "roman")
options(modelsummary_panel_labels = "roman")
The supported styles are: "model", "panel", "arabic", "letters", "roman", "(arabic)", "(letters)", "(roman)"
The panel-specific option is only used when shape="rbind"
modelsummary
supports 6 table-making packages: tinytable
, kableExtra
, gt
,
flextable
, huxtable
, and DT
. Some of these packages have overlapping
functionalities. To change the default backend used for a specific file
format, you can use ' the options
function:
options(modelsummary_factory_html = 'kableExtra')
options(modelsummary_factory_word = 'huxtable')
options(modelsummary_factory_png = 'gt')
options(modelsummary_factory_latex = 'gt')
options(modelsummary_factory_latex_tabular = 'kableExtra')
Change the look of tables in an automated and replicable way, using the modelsummary
theming functionality. See the vignette: https://modelsummary.com/articles/appearance.html
modelsummary_theme_gt
modelsummary_theme_kableExtra
modelsummary_theme_huxtable
modelsummary_theme_flextable
modelsummary_theme_dataframe
modelsummary
can use two sets of packages to extract information from
statistical models: the easystats
family (performance
and parameters
)
and broom
. By default, it uses easystats
first and then falls back on
broom
in case of failure. You can change the order of priorities or include
goodness-of-fit extracted by both packages by setting:
options(modelsummary_get = "easystats")
options(modelsummary_get = "broom")
options(modelsummary_get = "all")
By default, LaTeX tables enclose all numeric entries in the \num{}
command
from the siunitx package. To prevent this behavior, or to enclose numbers
in dollar signs (for LaTeX math mode), users can call:
options(modelsummary_format_numeric_latex = "plain")
options(modelsummary_format_numeric_latex = "mathmode")
A similar option can be used to display numerical entries using MathJax in HTML tables:
options(modelsummary_format_numeric_html = "mathjax")
When creating LaTeX via the tinytable
backend (default in version 2.0.0 and later), it is useful to include the following commands in the LaTeX preamble of your documents. Note that they are added automatically when compiling Rmarkdown or Quarto documents (except when the modelsummary()
calls are cached).
\usepackage{tabularray} \usepackage{float} \usepackage{graphicx} \usepackage[normalem]{ulem} \UseTblrLibrary{booktabs} \UseTblrLibrary{siunitx} \newcommand{\tinytableTabularrayUnderline}[1]{\underline{#1}} \newcommand{\tinytableTabularrayStrikeout}[1]{\sout{#1}} \NewTableCommand{\tinytableDefineColor}[3]{\definecolor{#1}{#2}{#3}}
library(modelsummary) # crosstab of two variables, showing counts, row percentages, and row/column totals datasummary_crosstab(cyl ~ gear, data = mtcars) # crosstab of two variables, showing counts only and no totals datasummary_crosstab(cyl ~ gear, statistic = ~ N, data = mtcars) # crosstab of three variables datasummary_crosstab(am * cyl ~ gear, data = mtcars) # crosstab with two variables and column percentages datasummary_crosstab(am ~ gear, statistic = ~ Percent("col"), data = mtcars)
Arel-Bundock V (2022). “modelsummary: Data and Model Summaries in R.” Journal of Statistical Software, 103(1), 1-23. \Sexpr[results=rd]{tools:::Rd_expr_doi("10.18637/jss.v103.i01")}.'
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