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Dplyr Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to dplyr
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Pandas
Flexible and powerful data analysis / manipulation library for Python, providing labeled data structures similar to R data.frame objects, statistical functions, and much more
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SaaSHub
SaaSHub - Software Alternatives and Reviews. SaaSHub helps you find the best software and product alternatives
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Apache Arrow
Apache Arrow is the universal columnar format and multi-language toolbox for fast data interchange and in-memory analytics
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cheatsheets
Posit Cheat Sheets - Can also be found at https://posit.co/resources/cheatsheets/. (by rstudio)
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explorer
Series (one-dimensional) and dataframes (two-dimensional) for fast and elegant data exploration in Elixir
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hal9ai
Discontinued Hal9 — Data apps powered by code and LLMs [Moved to: https://github.com/hal9ai/hal9]
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xgboost
Scalable, Portable and Distributed Gradient Boosting (GBDT, GBRT or GBM) Library, for Python, R, Java, Scala, C++ and more. Runs on single machine, Hadoop, Spark, Dask, Flink and DataFlow
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SaaSHub
SaaSHub - Software Alternatives and Reviews. SaaSHub helps you find the best software and product alternatives
dplyr discussion
dplyr reviews and mentions
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1MinDocker #6 - Building further
dplyr
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Declarative Multi-Engine Data Stack with Ibis
One pandas limitation is that it has its own API that does not quite map back to relational algebra. Ibis is such a library that's literally built by people who built pandas to provide a sane expressions system that can be mapped back to multiple SQL backends. Ibis takes inspiration from the dplyr R package to build a new expression system that can easily map back to relational algebra and thus compile to SQL. It also is declarative in style, enabling us to apply database style optimizations on the complete logical plan or the expression. Ibis is a key component for enabling composability as highlighted in the excellent composable codex.
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Show HN: Open-source, browser-local data exploration using DuckDB-WASM and PRQL
That's great feedback, thanks!
This tool definitely comes from a place of personal need - beyond just handling large files, I've also never really gelled well with the Excel/Google Sheet model of changing data in place as if you were editing text. I'm a Data Scientist and always preferred the chained data transforms you see in things like dplyr (https://dplyr.tidyverse.org/) or Polars (https://pola.rs/) and I feel this tool maps very closely to the chained model.
Also, thank you for the feature requests! Those would all be very useful - we'll put them on the roadmap.
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IS it possible for a R package to set an R option that only affects that package?
There's an example of how to use zzz.R with a .onload() function to set options in the dplyr code base: https://github.com/tidyverse/dplyr/blob/bbcfe99e29fe737d456b0d7adc33d3c445a32d9d/R/zzz.r
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Calculation within a data table by calling on specific values in two columns
Look at the tidyverse, especially the case_when or mutate functions.
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PSA: You don't need fancy stuff to do good work.
Before diving into advanced machine learning algorithms or statistical models, we need to start with the basics: collecting and organizing data. Fortunately, both Python and R offer a wealth of libraries that make it easy to collect data from a variety of sources, including web scraping, APIs, and reading from files. Key libraries in Python include requests, BeautifulSoup, and pandas, while R has httr, rvest, and dplyr.
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Creating data frame
It looks like your syntax is wrong. I think you’re trying to calculate a new variables in your data frame, or alter an existing column in a data frame. Have a look at the select() function in this reference for the proper syntax to use. https://dplyr.tidyverse.org/ Does that help?
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I'm designing a shirt for a friend, it has 4 embroidered images of things they like/do. One thing is coding, they use R... I'm wondering two things. 1) What's a good image or piece of code or something that I should use? and 2) should I even add it to the design the shirt?
A lot of populat libraries have their own logos. Maybe one of them would be good. Check out dplyr for example: https://dplyr.tidyverse.org/
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Anyone use Python for statistics, particularly DOE or QA/QC? What are your thoughts?
I hope you give it a try when you get a chance: https://dplyr.tidyverse.org/
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Rstudio tidyverse help!
You can read up on the dplyr-verbs here, which I strongly suggest for your exam! In the code examples, you can simply click on any function you don't understand and it will take you directly to the documentation. Good Luck!
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Stats
tidyverse/dplyr is an open source project licensed under GNU General Public License v3.0 or later which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of dplyr is R.