tidyr is now on CRAN 🎉 (#1247)
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@ -30,7 +30,6 @@ Imports:
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slider,
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tidymodels,
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tidyverse,
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tidyr,
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writexl
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Suggests:
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downlit,
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@ -39,7 +38,6 @@ Suggests:
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sessioninfo
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Remotes:
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tidyverse/dplyr,
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tidyverse/tidyr,
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tidyverse/tidyverse
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Encoding: UTF-8
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License: CC NC ND 3.0
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@ -26,8 +26,8 @@ Learning functional programming can easily veer into the abstract, but in this c
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### Prerequisites
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::: callout-important
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This chapter relies on features only found in purrr 1.0.0 and dplyr 1.1.0, which are still in development.
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If you want to live life on the edge you can get the dev version with `devtools::install_github(c("tidyverse/purrr", "tidyverse/dplyr"))`.
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This chapter relies on features only found in dplyr 1.1.0, which is still in development.
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If you want to live life on the edge you can get the dev version with `devtools::install_github(c( "tidyverse/dplyr"))`.
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:::
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In this chapter, we'll focus on tools provided by dplyr and purrr, both core members of the tidyverse.
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@ -22,11 +22,6 @@ We'll finish with a survey of other places in the tidyverse and base R where you
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### Prerequisites
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::: callout-important
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This chapter relies on features only found in tidyr 1.3.0, which is still in development.
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If you want to live on the edge, you can get the dev version with `devtools::install_github("tidyverse/tidyr")`.
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:::
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In this chapter, we'll use regular expression functions from stringr and tidyr, both core members of the tidyverse, as well as data from the babynames package.
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```{r}
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@ -21,11 +21,6 @@ We'll keep working with strings in the next chapter, where you'll learn more abo
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### Prerequisites
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::: callout-important
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This chapter relies on features only found in tidyr 1.3.0, which is still in development.
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If you want to live on the edge, you can get the dev versions with `devtools::install_github("tidyverse/tidyr")`.
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:::
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In this chapter, we'll use functions from the stringr package, which is part of the core tidyverse.
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We'll also use the babynames data since it provides some fun strings to manipulate.
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