Bit more about :=
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		@@ -737,7 +737,7 @@ diamonds |> hex_plot(carat, price, depth)
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Some of the most useful helpers combine a dash of dplyr with ggplot2.
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For example, if you might want to do a vertical bar chart where you automatically sort the bars in frequency order using `fct_infreq()`.
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Since the bar chart is vertical, we also need to reverse the usual order to get the highest values at the top (also note the `:=` operator, which allows you to inject names with glue syntax on the left-hand side of `:=`; type: ?\`:=\` for more details):
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Since the bar chart is vertical, we also need to reverse the usual order to get the highest values at the top:
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```{r}
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sorted_bars <- function(df, var) {
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@@ -750,6 +750,10 @@ sorted_bars <- function(df, var) {
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diamonds |> sorted_bars(cut)
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```
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We have to use a new operator here, `:=`, because we are generating the variable name based on user-supplied data.
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Variable names go on the left hand side of `=`, but R's syntax doesn't allow anything to the left of `=` except for a single literal name.
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To work around this problem, we use the special operator `:=` which tidy evaluation treats in exactly the same way as `=`.
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Or maybe you want to make it easy to draw a bar plot just for a subset of the data:
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```{r}
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