File: to_factor.Rd

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% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand
% Please edit documentation in R/to_factor.R
\name{to_factor}
\alias{to_factor}
\alias{to_factor.data.frame}
\title{Convert data to factors}
\usage{
to_factor(x, ...)

\method{to_factor}{data.frame}(
  x,
  select = NULL,
  exclude = NULL,
  ignore_case = FALSE,
  append = FALSE,
  regex = FALSE,
  verbose = TRUE,
  ...
)
}
\arguments{
\item{x}{A data frame or vector.}

\item{...}{Arguments passed to or from other methods.}

\item{select}{Variables that will be included when performing the required
tasks. Can be either
\itemize{
\item a variable specified as a literal variable name (e.g., \code{column_name}),
\item a string with the variable name (e.g., \code{"column_name"}), or a character
vector of variable names (e.g., \code{c("col1", "col2", "col3")}),
\item a formula with variable names (e.g., \code{~column_1 + column_2}),
\item a vector of positive integers, giving the positions counting from the left
(e.g. \code{1} or \code{c(1, 3, 5)}),
\item a vector of negative integers, giving the positions counting from the
right (e.g., \code{-1} or \code{-1:-3}),
\item one of the following select-helpers: \code{starts_with()}, \code{ends_with()},
\code{contains()}, a range using \code{:} or \code{regex("")}. \code{starts_with()},
\code{ends_with()}, and  \code{contains()} accept several patterns, e.g
\code{starts_with("Sep", "Petal")}.
\item or a function testing for logical conditions, e.g. \code{is.numeric()} (or
\code{is.numeric}), or any user-defined function that selects the variables
for which the function returns \code{TRUE} (like: \code{foo <- function(x) mean(x) > 3}),
\item ranges specified via literal variable names, select-helpers (except
\code{regex()}) and (user-defined) functions can be negated, i.e. return
non-matching elements, when prefixed with a \code{-}, e.g. \code{-ends_with("")},
\code{-is.numeric} or \code{-Sepal.Width:Petal.Length}. \strong{Note:} Negation means
that matches are \emph{excluded}, and thus, the \code{exclude} argument can be
used alternatively. For instance, \code{select=-ends_with("Length")} (with
\code{-}) is equivalent to \code{exclude=ends_with("Length")} (no \code{-}). In case
negation should not work as expected, use the \code{exclude} argument instead.
}

If \code{NULL}, selects all columns. Patterns that found no matches are silently
ignored, e.g. \code{find_columns(iris, select = c("Species", "Test"))} will just
return \code{"Species"}.}

\item{exclude}{See \code{select}, however, column names matched by the pattern
from \code{exclude} will be excluded instead of selected. If \code{NULL} (the default),
excludes no columns.}

\item{ignore_case}{Logical, if \code{TRUE} and when one of the select-helpers or
a regular expression is used in \code{select}, ignores lower/upper case in the
search pattern when matching against variable names.}

\item{append}{Logical or string. If \code{TRUE}, recoded or converted variables
get new column names and are appended (column bind) to \code{x}, thus returning
both the original and the recoded variables. The new columns get a suffix,
based on the calling function: \code{"_r"} for recode functions, \code{"_n"} for
\code{to_numeric()}, \code{"_f"} for \code{to_factor()}, or \code{"_s"} for
\code{slide()}. If \code{append=FALSE}, original variables in \code{x} will be
overwritten by their recoded versions. If a character value, recoded
variables are appended with new column names (using the defined suffix) to
the original data frame.}

\item{regex}{Logical, if \code{TRUE}, the search pattern from \code{select} will be
treated as regular expression. When \code{regex = TRUE}, select \emph{must} be a
character string (or a variable containing a character string) and is not
allowed to be one of the supported select-helpers or a character vector
of length > 1. \code{regex = TRUE} is comparable to using one of the two
select-helpers, \code{select = contains("")} or \code{select = regex("")}, however,
since the select-helpers may not work when called from inside other
functions (see 'Details'), this argument may be used as workaround.}

\item{verbose}{Toggle warnings.}
}
\value{
A factor, or a data frame of factors.
}
\description{
Convert data to factors
}
\details{
Convert data to numeric by converting characters to factors and factors to
either numeric levels or dummy variables. The "counterpart" to convert
variables into numeric is \code{to_numeric()}.
}
\section{Selection of variables - the \code{select} argument}{

For most functions that have a \code{select} argument (including this function),
the complete input data frame is returned, even when \code{select} only selects
a range of variables. That is, the function is only applied to those variables
that have a match in \code{select}, while all other variables remain unchanged.
In other words: for this function, \code{select} will not omit any non-included
variables, so that the returned data frame will include all variables
from the input data frame.
}

\examples{
str(to_factor(iris))

# use labels as levels
data(efc)
str(efc$c172code)
head(to_factor(efc$c172code))
}