The Design Philosophy of Functions in sjmisc

Basically, this package complements the dplyr package in that sjmisc takes over data transformation tasks on variables, like recoding, dichotomizing or grouping variables, setting and replacing missing values, etc. The data transformation functions also support labelled data.

The design of data transformation functions

The design of data transformation functions in this package follows, where appropriate, the tidyverse-approach, with the first argument of a function always being the data (either a data frame or vector), followed by variable names that should be processed by the function. If no variables are specified as argument, the function applies to the complete data that was indicated as first function argument.

The data-argument

A major difference to dplyr-functions like select() or filter() is that the data-argument (the first argument of each function), may either be a data frame or a vector. The returned object for each function equals the type of the data-argument:

  • If the data-argument is a vector, the function returns a vector.
  • If the data-argument is a data frame, the function returns a data frame.
library(sjmisc)
data(efc)

# returns a vector
x <- rec(efc$e42dep, rec = "1,2=1; 3,4=2")
str(x)
#>  num [1:908] 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 ...
#>  - attr(*, "label")= chr "elder's dependency"

# returns a data frame
rec(efc, e42dep, rec = "1,2=1; 3,4=2", append = FALSE) %>% head()
#>   e42dep_r
#> 1        2
#> 2        2
#> 3        2
#> 4        2
#> 5        2
#> 6        2

This design-choice is mainly due to compatibility- and convenience-reasons. It does not affect the usual “tidyverse-workflow” or when using pipe-chains.

The …-ellipses-argument

The selection of variables specified in the ...-ellipses-argument is powered by dplyr’s select() and tidyselect’s select_helpers(). This means, you can use existing functions like : to select a range of variables, or also use tidyselect’s select_helpers, like contains() or one_of().

# select all variables with "cop" in their names, and also
# the range from c161sex to c175empl
rec(
  efc, contains("cop"), c161sex:c175empl, 
  rec = "0,1=0; else=1", 
  append = FALSE
) %>% head()
#>   c82cop1_r c83cop2_r c84cop3_r c85cop4_r c86cop5_r c87cop6_r c88cop7_r
#> 1         1         1         1         1         0         0         1
#> 2         1         1         1         1         1         0         1
#> 3         1         1         0         1         0         0         0
#> 4         1         0         1         0         0         0         0
#> 5         1         1         0         1         1         1         0
#> 6         1         1         1         1         1         1         1
#>   c89cop8_r c90cop9_r c161sex_r c172code_r c175empl_r
#> 1         1         1         1          1          0
#> 2         1         1         1          1          0
#> 3         1         1         0          0          0
#> 4         1         1         0          1          0
#> 5         1         1         1          1          0
#> 6         0         0         0          1          0

# center all variables with "age" in name, variable c12hour
# and all variables from column 19 to 21
center(efc, c12hour, contains("age"), 19:21, append = FALSE) %>% head()
#>   c12hour_c   e17age_c  c160age_c barthtot_c  neg_c_7_c pos_v_4_c
#> 1 -26.39911   3.878788  2.5371809  10.453001  0.1502242 -0.476731
#> 2 105.60089   8.878788  0.5371809  10.453001  8.1502242 -1.476731
#> 3  27.60089   2.878788 26.5371809 -29.546999 -0.8497758  0.523269
#> 4 125.60089 -12.121212 15.5371809 -64.546999 -1.8497758  2.523269
#> 5 125.60089   4.878788 -6.4628191 -39.546999  0.1502242  2.523269
#> 6 -26.39911   5.878788  2.5371809  -4.546999  7.1502242 -3.476731

The function-types

There are two types of function designs:

coercing/converting functions

Functions like to_factor() or to_label(), which convert variables into other types or add additional information like variable or value labels as attribute, typically return the complete data frame that was given as first argument without any new variables. The variables specified in the ...-ellipses argument are converted (overwritten), all other variables remain unchanged.

x <- efc[, 3:5]

x %>% str()
#> 'data.frame':    908 obs. of  3 variables:
#>  $ e16sex: num  2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 ...
#>   ..- attr(*, "label")= chr "elder's gender"
#>   ..- attr(*, "labels")= Named num [1:2] 1 2
#>   .. ..- attr(*, "names")= chr [1:2] "male" "female"
#>  $ e17age: num  83 88 82 67 84 85 74 87 79 83 ...
#>   ..- attr(*, "label")= chr "elder' age"
#>  $ e42dep: num  3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ...
#>   ..- attr(*, "label")= chr "elder's dependency"
#>   ..- attr(*, "labels")= Named num [1:4] 1 2 3 4
#>   .. ..- attr(*, "names")= chr [1:4] "independent" "slightly dependent" "moderately dependent" "severely dependent"

to_factor(x, e42dep, e16sex) %>% str()
#> 'data.frame':    908 obs. of  3 variables:
#>  $ e16sex: Factor w/ 2 levels "1","2": 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 ...
#>   ..- attr(*, "labels")= Named num [1:2] 1 2
#>   .. ..- attr(*, "names")= chr [1:2] "male" "female"
#>   ..- attr(*, "label")= chr "elder's gender"
#>  $ e17age: num  83 88 82 67 84 85 74 87 79 83 ...
#>   ..- attr(*, "label")= chr "elder' age"
#>  $ e42dep: Factor w/ 4 levels "1","2","3","4": 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ...
#>   ..- attr(*, "labels")= Named num [1:4] 1 2 3 4
#>   .. ..- attr(*, "names")= chr [1:4] "independent" "slightly dependent" "moderately dependent" "severely dependent"
#>   ..- attr(*, "label")= chr "elder's dependency"

transformation/recoding functions

Functions like rec() or dicho(), which transform or recode variables, by default add the transformed or recoded variables to the data frame, so they return the new variables and the original data as combined data frame. To return only the transformed and recoded variables specified in the ...-ellipses argument, use argument append = FALSE.

# complete data, including new columns
rec(efc, c82cop1, c83cop2, rec = "1,2=0; 3:4=2", append = TRUE) %>% head()
#>   c12hour e15relat e16sex e17age e42dep c82cop1 c83cop2 c84cop3 c85cop4 c86cop5
#> 1      16        2      2     83      3       3       2       2       2       1
#> 2     148        2      2     88      3       3       3       3       3       4
#> 3      70        1      2     82      3       2       2       1       4       1
#> 4     168        1      2     67      4       4       1       3       1       1
#> 5     168        2      2     84      4       3       2       1       2       2
#> 6      16        2      2     85      4       2       2       3       3       3
#>   c87cop6 c88cop7 c89cop8 c90cop9 c160age c161sex c172code c175empl barthtot
#> 1       1       2       3       3      56       2        2        1       75
#> 2       1       3       2       2      54       2        2        1       75
#> 3       1       1       4       3      80       1        1        0       35
#> 4       1       1       2       4      69       1        2        0        0
#> 5       2       1       4       4      47       2        2        0       25
#> 6       2       2       1       1      56       1        2        1       60
#>   neg_c_7 pos_v_4 quol_5 resttotn tot_sc_e n4pstu nur_pst c82cop1_r c83cop2_r
#> 1      12      12     14        0        4      0      NA         2         0
#> 2      20      11     10        4        0      0      NA         2         2
#> 3      11      13      7        0        1      2       2         0         0
#> 4      10      15     12        2        0      3       3         2         0
#> 5      12      15     19        2        1      2       2         2         0
#> 6      19       9      8        1        3      2       2         0         0

# only new columns
rec(efc, c82cop1, c83cop2, rec = "1,2=0; 3:4=2", append = FALSE) %>% head()
#>   c82cop1_r c83cop2_r
#> 1         2         0
#> 2         2         2
#> 3         0         0
#> 4         2         0
#> 5         2         0
#> 6         0         0

These variables usually get a suffix, so you can bind these variables as new columns to a data frame, for instance with add_columns(). The function add_columns() is useful if you want to bind/add columns within a pipe-chain to the end of a data frame.

efc %>% 
  rec(c82cop1, c83cop2, rec = "1,2=0; 3:4=2", append = FALSE) %>% 
  add_columns(efc) %>% 
  head()
#>   c12hour e15relat e16sex e17age e42dep c82cop1 c83cop2 c84cop3 c85cop4 c86cop5
#> 1      16        2      2     83      3       3       2       2       2       1
#> 2     148        2      2     88      3       3       3       3       3       4
#> 3      70        1      2     82      3       2       2       1       4       1
#> 4     168        1      2     67      4       4       1       3       1       1
#> 5     168        2      2     84      4       3       2       1       2       2
#> 6      16        2      2     85      4       2       2       3       3       3
#>   c87cop6 c88cop7 c89cop8 c90cop9 c160age c161sex c172code c175empl barthtot
#> 1       1       2       3       3      56       2        2        1       75
#> 2       1       3       2       2      54       2        2        1       75
#> 3       1       1       4       3      80       1        1        0       35
#> 4       1       1       2       4      69       1        2        0        0
#> 5       2       1       4       4      47       2        2        0       25
#> 6       2       2       1       1      56       1        2        1       60
#>   neg_c_7 pos_v_4 quol_5 resttotn tot_sc_e n4pstu nur_pst c82cop1_r c83cop2_r
#> 1      12      12     14        0        4      0      NA         2         0
#> 2      20      11     10        4        0      0      NA         2         2
#> 3      11      13      7        0        1      2       2         0         0
#> 4      10      15     12        2        0      3       3         2         0
#> 5      12      15     19        2        1      2       2         2         0
#> 6      19       9      8        1        3      2       2         0         0

If append = TRUE and suffix = "", recoded variables will replace (overwrite) existing variables.

# complete data, existing columns c82cop1 and c83cop2 are replaced
rec(efc, c82cop1, c83cop2, rec = "1,2=0; 3:4=2", append = TRUE, suffix = "") %>% head()
#>   c12hour e15relat e16sex e17age e42dep c82cop1 c83cop2 c84cop3 c85cop4 c86cop5
#> 1      16        2      2     83      3       2       0       2       2       1
#> 2     148        2      2     88      3       2       2       3       3       4
#> 3      70        1      2     82      3       0       0       1       4       1
#> 4     168        1      2     67      4       2       0       3       1       1
#> 5     168        2      2     84      4       2       0       1       2       2
#> 6      16        2      2     85      4       0       0       3       3       3
#>   c87cop6 c88cop7 c89cop8 c90cop9 c160age c161sex c172code c175empl barthtot
#> 1       1       2       3       3      56       2        2        1       75
#> 2       1       3       2       2      54       2        2        1       75
#> 3       1       1       4       3      80       1        1        0       35
#> 4       1       1       2       4      69       1        2        0        0
#> 5       2       1       4       4      47       2        2        0       25
#> 6       2       2       1       1      56       1        2        1       60
#>   neg_c_7 pos_v_4 quol_5 resttotn tot_sc_e n4pstu nur_pst
#> 1      12      12     14        0        4      0      NA
#> 2      20      11     10        4        0      0      NA
#> 3      11      13      7        0        1      2       2
#> 4      10      15     12        2        0      3       3
#> 5      12      15     19        2        1      2       2
#> 6      19       9      8        1        3      2       2

sjmisc and dplyr

The functions of sjmisc are designed to work together seamlessly with other packages from the tidyverse, like dplyr. For instance, you can use the functions from sjmisc both within a pipe-worklflow to manipulate data frames, or to create new variables with mutate():

efc %>% 
  select(c82cop1, c83cop2) %>% 
  rec(rec = "1,2=0; 3:4=2") %>% 
  head()
#>   c82cop1 c83cop2 c82cop1_r c83cop2_r
#> 1       3       2         2         0
#> 2       3       3         2         2
#> 3       2       2         0         0
#> 4       4       1         2         0
#> 5       3       2         2         0
#> 6       2       2         0         0

efc %>% 
  select(c82cop1, c83cop2) %>% 
  mutate(
    c82cop1_dicho = rec(c82cop1, rec = "1,2=0; 3:4=2"),
    c83cop2_dicho = rec(c83cop2, rec = "1,2=0; 3:4=2")
  ) %>% 
  head()
#>   c82cop1 c83cop2 c82cop1_dicho c83cop2_dicho
#> 1       3       2             2             0
#> 2       3       3             2             2
#> 3       2       2             0             0
#> 4       4       1             2             0
#> 5       3       2             2             0
#> 6       2       2             0             0

This makes it easy to adapt the sjmisc functions to your own workflow.