vtable

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The vtable package is designed to help you quickly and efficiently look at and document your data.

There are three main functions in vtable:

  1. vtable, or vt for short, shows you information about the variables in your data set, including variable labels, in a way that is easy to use “find in page” to search through. It was designed to be similar to Stata’s “Variables” panel.
  2. sumtable or st for short, provides a table of summary statistics. It is very similar in spirit to the summary statistics function of stargazer::stargazer() except that it accepts tibbles, handles factor variables, and makes by-group statistics and group tests easy.
  3. labeltable provides a table of value labels, either for variables labelled with sjlabelled or haven or similar, or for when you want to see how the values of one column line up with the values of another.

All three of these functions are built with the intent of being fast. Not so much fast to run, but fast to use. The defaults are intended to be good defaults, and the output by default prints to the Viewer tab (in RStudio) or the browser (outside RStudio) so you can see it immediately, and continue to look at it as you work on your data.

You could almost certainly build your own highly-customized version of vtable, But why do that when you can just do vt(df) and see the information you need to see? And there are eight million packages that make summary statistics tables to your exact specifications if you tweak them. But there’s a good chance that st(df) does what you want. If you want something real out there, that’s when you can break out the big guns.

All three main vtable functions can produce HTML, LaTeX, data.frame, CSV, or knitr::kable() output.

Installation

You can install vtable from CRAN. Note that the documentation on this site refers to the development version, and so may not work perfectly for the CRAN version. But the two will usually be the same.:

install.packages("vtable")

Development version

The development version can be installed from GitHub:

# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("NickCH-K/vtable")

vtable Example

I’ll just do a brief example here, using the iris we all know and love. Output will be to kable since this is an RMarkdown document.

data(iris)

# Basic vtable
vt(iris)
iris
Name Class Values
Sepal.Length numeric Num: 4.3 to 7.9
Sepal.Width numeric Num: 2 to 4.4
Petal.Length numeric Num: 1 to 6.9
Petal.Width numeric Num: 0.1 to 2.5
Species factor ‘setosa’ ‘versicolor’ ‘virginica’

There are plenty of options if we want to go nuts, but let’s keep it simple and just ask for a little more with lush

vt(iris, lush = TRUE)
iris
Name Class Values Missing Summary
Sepal.Length numeric Num: 4.3 to 7.9 0 mean: 5.843, sd: 0.828, nuniq: 35
Sepal.Width numeric Num: 2 to 4.4 0 mean: 3.057, sd: 0.436, nuniq: 23
Petal.Length numeric Num: 1 to 6.9 0 mean: 3.758, sd: 1.765, nuniq: 43
Petal.Width numeric Num: 0.1 to 2.5 0 mean: 1.199, sd: 0.762, nuniq: 22
Species factor ‘setosa’ ‘versicolor’ ‘virginica’ 0 nuniq: 3

sumtable Example

Let’s stick with iris!

# Basic summary stats
st(iris)
Summary Statistics
Variable N Mean Std. Dev. Min Pctl. 25 Pctl. 75 Max
Sepal.Length 150 5.843 0.828 4.3 5.1 6.4 7.9
Sepal.Width 150 3.057 0.436 2 2.8 3.3 4.4
Petal.Length 150 3.758 1.765 1 1.6 5.1 6.9
Petal.Width 150 1.199 0.762 0.1 0.3 1.8 2.5
Species 150
… setosa 50 33.3%
… versicolor 50 33.3%
… virginica 50 33.3%

Note that sumtable allows for much more customization than vtable since there’s a heightened chance you want it for a paper or something. But I’ll leave that to the more detailed documentation. For now just note it does by-group stats, either in “group.long” format (multiple sumtables stacked on top of each other), or by default, in columns, with an option to add a group test.

Grouped sumtables look a little nicer in formats that suport multi-column cells like HTML and LaTeX.

These tables include multi-column cells, which are not supported in the kable output, but are supported by vtable’s dftoHTML and dftoLaTeX functions. They look nicer in the HTML or LaTeX output.

st(iris, 
   group = 'Species', 
   group.test = TRUE)
Summary Statistics

Species

setosa

versicolor

virginica

Variable N Mean SD N Mean SD N Mean SD Test
Sepal.Length 50 5.006 0.352 50 5.936 0.516 50 6.588 0.636 F=119.265***
Sepal.Width 50 3.428 0.379 50 2.77 0.314 50 2.974 0.322 F=49.16***
Petal.Length 50 1.462 0.174 50 4.26 0.47 50 5.552 0.552 F=1180.161***
Petal.Width 50 0.246 0.105 50 1.326 0.198 50 2.026 0.275 F=960.007***
Statistical significance markers: * p<0.1; ** p<0.05; *** p<0.01

labeltable Example

For this we’ll need labeled values.

data(efc, package = 'sjlabelled')

# Now shoot - how was gender coded?
labeltable(efc$e16sex)
e16sex Label
1 male
2 female

labeltable can also be used to see, for values of one variable, what values are present of other variables. This is intended for use if one variable is a recode, simplification, or lost-labels version of another, but hey, go nuts.

labeltable(efc$e15relat,efc$e16sex,efc$e42dep)
e15relat e16sex e42dep
1 2, 1 3, 4, 1, 2, NA
2 2, 1, NA 3, 4, 2, 1
3 1, 2 3, 2, 1, 4
4 2, 1 4, 3, 2, 1
5 2, 1 3, 2, 1, 4
6 2, 1 4, 3, 1, 2
7 2, 1 4, 3, 2, 1
8 2, 1 3, 4, 2, 1
NA 2, NA 3, NA

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