tbl <- dplyr::tibble(num = c(0, NA, 10^(8:14)))
tbl# A tibble: 9 × 1
num
<dbl>
1 0
2 NA
3 1e 8
4 1e 9
5 1e10
6 1e11
7 1e12
8 1e13
9 1e14
sub_large_vals() functionLet’s generate a simple, single-column tibble that contains an assortment of values that could potentially undergo some substitution.
# A tibble: 9 × 1
num
<dbl>
1 0
2 NA
3 1e 8
4 1e 9
5 1e10
6 1e11
7 1e12
8 1e13
9 1e14
The tbl object contains a variety of larger numbers and some might be larger enough to reformat with a threshold value. With sub_large_vals() we can do just that:
| num |
|---|
| 0.00 |
| NA |
| 100,000,000.00 |
| 1,000,000,000.00 |
| 10,000,000,000.00 |
| 100,000,000,000.00 |
| ≥1e+12 |
| ≥1e+12 |
| ≥1e+12 |
Large negative values can also be handled but they are handled specially by the sign parameter. Setting that to "-" will format only the large values that are negative. Notice that with the default large_pattern value of ">={x“} the ">=" is automatically changed to "<=".
| num |
|---|
| 0.00 |
| NA |
| −100,000,000.00 |
| −1,000,000,000.00 |
| −10,000,000,000.00 |
| −100,000,000,000.00 |
| ≤-1e+12 |
| ≤-1e+12 |
| ≤-1e+12 |
You don’t have to settle with the default threshold value or the default replacement pattern (in large_pattern). This can be changed and the "{x“} in large_pattern (which uses the threshold value) can even be omitted.