The cols_merge_range() function is a specialized variant of the cols_merge() function. It operates by taking a two columns that constitute a range of values (col_begin and col_end) and merges them into a single column. What results is a column containing both values separated by a long dash (e.g., 12.0 — 20.0). The column specified in col_end is dropped from the output table.

cols_merge_range(data, col_begin, col_end, sep = "--", autohide = TRUE)

Arguments

data

A table object that is created using the gt() function.

col_begin

A column that contains values for the start of the range.

col_end

A column that contains values for the end of the range.

sep

The separator text that indicates the values are ranged. The default value of "--" indicates that an en dash will be used for the range separator. Using "---" will be taken to mean that an em dash should be used. Should you want these special symbols to be taken literally, they can be supplied within the base I() function.

autohide

An option to automatically hide the column specified as col_end. Any columns with their state changed to hidden will behave the same as before, they just won't be displayed in the finalized table.

Value

An object of class gt_tbl.

Details

This function could be somewhat replicated using cols_merge(), however, cols_merge_range() employs the following specialized operations for NA handling:

  1. NAs in col_begin (but not col_end) result in a display of only

  2. NAs in col_end (but not col_begin) result in a display of only the col_begin values only for the merged column (this is the converse of the previous)

  3. NAs both in col_begin and col_end result in missing values for the merged column

Any resulting NA values in the col_begin column following the merge operation can be easily formatted using the fmt_missing() function. Separate calls of fmt_missing() can be used for the col_begin and col_end columns for finer control of the replacement values.

This function is part of a set of three column-merging functions. The other two are the general cols_merge() function and the specialized cols_merge_uncert() function. These functions operate similarly, where the non-target columns can be optionally hidden from the output table through the hide_columns or autohide options.

Figures

Function ID

4-9

See also

Examples

# Use `gtcars` to create a gt table, # keeping only the `model`, `mpg_c`, # and `mpg_h` columns; merge the mpg # columns together as a single range # column (which is labeled as MPG, # in italics) tab_1 <- gtcars %>% dplyr::select(model, starts_with("mpg")) %>% dplyr::slice(1:8) %>% gt() %>% cols_merge_range( col_begin = vars(mpg_c), col_end = vars(mpg_h) ) %>% cols_label( mpg_c = md("*MPG*") )