Every layout must start with a basic table.
Arguments
- title
(
string
)
single string to use as main title (formatters::main_title()
). Ignored for subtables.- subtitles
(
character
)
a vector of strings to use as subtitles (formatters::subtitles()
), where every element is printed on a separate line. Ignored for subtables.(
character
)
a vector of strings to use as main global (non-referential) footer materials (formatters::main_footer()
), where every element is printed on a separate line.(
character
)
a vector of strings to use as provenance-related global footer materials (formatters::prov_footer()
), where every element is printed on a separate line.- show_colcounts
(
logical(1)
)
Indicates whether the lowest level of applied to data.NA
, the default, indicates that theshow_colcounts
argument(s) passed to the relevant calls tosplit_cols_by*
functions. Non-missing values will override the behavior specified in column splitting layout instructions which create the lowest level, or leaf, columns.- colcount_format
(
string
)
format for use when displaying the column counts. Must be 1d, or 2d where one component is a percent. This will also apply to any displayed higher level column counts where an explicit format was not specified. Defaults to"(N=xx)"
. See Details below.- header_section_div
(
string
)
string which will be used to divide the header from the table. Seeheader_section_div()
for the associated getter and setter. Please consider changing last element ofsection_div()
when concatenating tables that require a divider between them.- top_level_section_div
(
character(1)
)
if assigned a single character, the first (top level) split or division of the table will be highlighted by a line made of that character. See section_div for more information.- inset
(
numeric(1)
)
number of spaces to inset the table header, table body, referential footnotes, and main_footer, as compared to alignment of title, subtitle, and provenance footer. Defaults to 0 (no inset).
Value
A PreDataTableLayouts
object suitable for passing to further layouting functions, and to build_table()
.
Details
colcount_format
is ignored if show_colcounts
is FALSE
(the default). When show_colcounts
is TRUE
,
and colcount_format
is 2-dimensional with a percent component, the value component for the percent is always
populated with 1
(i.e. 100%). 1d formats are used to render the counts exactly as they normally would be,
while 2d formats which don't include a percent, and all 3d formats result in an error. Formats in the form of
functions are not supported for colcount
format. See formatters::list_valid_format_labels()
for the list
of valid format labels to select from.
Note
Because percent components in
colcount_format
are always populated with the value 1, we can get arguably strange results, such as that individual arm columns and a combined "all patients" column all list "100%" as their percentage, even though the individual arm columns represent strict subsets of the "all patients" column.Note that subtitles (
formatters::subtitles()
) and footers (formatters::main_footer()
andformatters::prov_footer()
) that span more than one line can be supplied as a character vector to maintain indentation on multiple lines.
Examples
lyt <- basic_table() %>%
analyze("AGE", afun = mean)
tbl <- build_table(lyt, DM)
tbl
#> all obs
#> ———————————————————————
#> mean 34.2219101123596
lyt2 <- basic_table(
title = "Title of table",
subtitles = c("a number", "of subtitles"),
main_footer = "test footer",
prov_footer = paste(
"test.R program, executed at",
Sys.time()
)
) %>%
split_cols_by("ARM") %>%
analyze("AGE", mean)
tbl2 <- build_table(lyt2, DM)
tbl2
#> Title of table
#> a number
#> of subtitles
#>
#> —————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————
#> A: Drug X B: Placebo C: Combination
#> —————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————
#> mean 34.9090909090909 33.0188679245283 34.5658914728682
#> —————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————
#>
#> test footer
#>
#> test.R program, executed at 2024-09-23 02:17:58.999778
lyt3 <- basic_table(
show_colcounts = TRUE,
colcount_format = "xx. (xx.%)"
) %>%
split_cols_by("ARM")