The goal of scicomptools
is to house all of the standalone functions
written by the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis
(NCEAS) Scientific Computing Team staff that lack a specific project.
Currently contains various tools to import, summarize, and visualize
data. Non-function scripts created by this team are part of the
scicomptasks
repository.
You can install the development version of scicomptools
from
GitHub with:
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("NCEAS/scicomptools")
Or download from CRAN with:
install.packages("scicomptools")
stat_extract
Extracts core summary statistics for model fit objects returned by the following functions:lmerTest::lmer
,stats::lm
,stats::nls
,stats::t.test
,nlme::lme
,ecodist::MRM
, andRRPP::trajectory.analysis
drive_toc
: Identifies the complete folder hierarchy within a user-supplied URL for a Google Drive folder. Useful in generating a table of contents for a Google Drive. Also allows exclusion of folders by name if there are folders that you would not want included in a table of contents
-
molec_wt
: Identifies molecular weight for the specified element (based on name, symbol, or atomic number) -
read_xl_sheets
: Reads in all the sheets in a supplied Microsoft Excel workbook and returns a list of those contents -
read_xl_format
: Identifies the formatting of every cell in a supplied Microsoft Excel workbook (including comment text)
-
word_cloud_prep
: Performs text mining on a given text column of a dataframe to create a dataframe that is ready for word cloud creation -
word_cloud_plot
: Performs text mining (usingword_cloud_prep
) and creates a simpleggplot2
word cloud (for those who don’t want to handle their own plotting aesthetics)
wd_loc
: Allows user to easily specify file paths both for local and remote work and then toggle between them in the same script as needed. Useful when work is being done both in local computers and on a remote server
token_check
: Checks for whether a token for the supplied API can be found for your current R session. For example, Qualtrics allows direct acquisition of data from R if you have a token and your R session “knows” that string. This function quickly checks whether you’d be able to use that workflow (currently only supports search for Qualtrics and GitHub tokens but could be easily expanded!)
issue_extract
: Exports specified GitHub issues as PDF files when given the URL of a GitHub repository and a numeric vector of GitHub issue numbers. This function will export the first 10 issues as a default.