R for Social Scientists
- Use RStudio to write and run R programs.
- Use
install.packages()
to install packages
(libraries).
- Access individual values by location using
[]
.
- Access arbitrary sets of data using
[c(...)]
.
- Use logical operations and logical vectors to access subsets of
data.
- Use read_csv to read tabular data in R.
- Use factors to represent categorical data in R.
- Use the
dplyr
package to manipulate dataframes.
- Use
select()
to choose variables from a dataframe.
- Use
filter()
to choose data based on values.
- Use
group_by()
and summarize()
to work
with subsets of data.
- Use
mutate()
to create new variables.
- Use the
tidyr
package to change the layout of data
frames.
- Use
pivot_wider()
to go from long to wide format.
- Use
pivot_longer()
to go from wide to long format.
-
ggplot2
is a flexible and useful tool for creating
plots in R.
- The data set and coordinate system can be defined using the
ggplot
function.
- Additional layers, including geoms, are added using the
+
operator.
- Boxplots are useful for visualizing the distribution of a continuous
variable.
- Barplots are useful for visualizing categorical data.
- Faceting allows you to generate multiple plots based on a
categorical variable.
- R Markdown is a useful language for creating reproducible documents
combining text and executable R-code.
- Specify chunk options to control formatting of the output
document
- JSON is a popular data format for transferring data used by a great
many Web based APIs
- The complex structure of a JSON document means that it cannot easily
be ‘flattened’ into tabular data
- We can use R code to extract values of interest and place them in a
csv file