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You're reading from  R Bioinformatics Cookbook - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inOct 2023
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781837634279
Edition2nd Edition
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Author (1)
Dan MacLean
Dan MacLean
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Dan MacLean

Professor Dan MacLean has a PhD in molecular biology from the University of Cambridge and gained postdoctoral experience in genomics and bioinformatics at Stanford University in California. Dan is now an honorary professor at the School of Computing Sciences at the University of East Anglia. He has worked in bioinformatics and plant pathogenomics, specializing in R and Bioconductor, and has developed analytical workflows in bioinformatics, genomics, genetics, image analysis, and proteomics at the Sainsbury Laboratory since 2006. Dan has developed and published software packages in R, Ruby, and Python, with over 100,000 downloads combined.
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Making base R objects “tidy”

The tidyverse packages (including dplyr, tidyr, and ggplot2) have had a huge influence on data processing and analysis in R, through their application of the “tidy” way of working. In essence, “tidy” means that data is kept in a particular format, in which each row holds a single observation of some variable , and columns specify the variables recorded and contain all values for those variables across all observations. Such a structure means that analytical steps have predictable input and output and can be built into complex pipelines with relative ease. Most base R objects are not tidy, and it can often take significant programming work to extract the parts that are needed downstream. In this recipe, we will look at some functions to automatically convert some common base R objects into a tidy dataframe.

Getting ready

We’ll need tidyr, broom, and also biobroom from Bioconductor. For data, we’...

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R Bioinformatics Cookbook - Second Edition
Published in: Oct 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781837634279

Author (1)

author image
Dan MacLean

Professor Dan MacLean has a PhD in molecular biology from the University of Cambridge and gained postdoctoral experience in genomics and bioinformatics at Stanford University in California. Dan is now an honorary professor at the School of Computing Sciences at the University of East Anglia. He has worked in bioinformatics and plant pathogenomics, specializing in R and Bioconductor, and has developed analytical workflows in bioinformatics, genomics, genetics, image analysis, and proteomics at the Sainsbury Laboratory since 2006. Dan has developed and published software packages in R, Ruby, and Python, with over 100,000 downloads combined.
Read more about Dan MacLean