Introduction to dplyr

When working with data you must:

The dplyr package makes these steps fast and easy:

This document introduces you to dplyr’s basic set of tools, and shows you how to apply them to data frames. dplyr also supports databases via the dbplyr package, once you’ve installed, read vignette("dbplyr") to learn more.

Data: starwars

To explore the basic data manipulation verbs of dplyr, we’ll use the dataset starwars. This dataset contains 87 characters and comes from the Star Wars API, and is documented in ?starwars

dim(starwars)
#> [1] 87 14
starwars
#> # A tibble: 87 × 14
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Luke Skywal…    172    77 blond   fair    blue       19   male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 2 C-3PO           167    75 <NA>    gold    yellow    112   none  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 3 R2-D2            96    32 <NA>    white,… red        33   none  mascu… Naboo  
#> 4 Darth Vader     202   136 none    white   yellow     41.9 male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> # … with 83 more rows, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld

Note that starwars is a tibble, a modern reimagining of the data frame. It’s particularly useful for large datasets because it only prints the first few rows. You can learn more about tibbles at https://tibble.tidyverse.org; in particular you can convert data frames to tibbles with as_tibble().

Single table verbs

dplyr aims to provide a function for each basic verb of data manipulation. These verbs can be organised into three categories based on the component of the dataset that they work with:

The pipe

All of the dplyr functions take a data frame (or tibble) as the first argument. Rather than forcing the user to either save intermediate objects or nest functions, dplyr provides the %>% operator from magrittr. x %>% f(y) turns into f(x, y) so the result from one step is then “piped” into the next step. You can use the pipe to rewrite multiple operations that you can read left-to-right, top-to-bottom (reading the pipe operator as “then”).

Filter rows with filter()

filter() allows you to select a subset of rows in a data frame. Like all single verbs, the first argument is the tibble (or data frame). The second and subsequent arguments refer to variables within that data frame, selecting rows where the expression is TRUE.

For example, we can select all character with light skin color and brown eyes with:

starwars %>% filter(skin_color == "light", eye_color == "brown")
#> # A tibble: 7 × 14
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Leia Organa     150    49 brown   light   brown        19 fema… femin… Aldera…
#> 2 Biggs Darkl…    183    84 black   light   brown        24 male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 3 Cordé           157    NA brown   light   brown        NA fema… femin… Naboo  
#> 4 Dormé           165    NA brown   light   brown        NA fema… femin… Naboo  
#> # … with 3 more rows, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld

This is roughly equivalent to this base R code:

starwars[starwars$skin_color == "light" & starwars$eye_color == "brown", ]

Arrange rows with arrange()

arrange() works similarly to filter() except that instead of filtering or selecting rows, it reorders them. It takes a data frame, and a set of column names (or more complicated expressions) to order by. If you provide more than one column name, each additional column will be used to break ties in the values of preceding columns:

starwars %>% arrange(height, mass)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 14
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Yoda             66    17 white   green   brown       896 male  mascu… <NA>   
#> 2 Ratts Tyere…     79    15 none    grey, … unknown      NA male  mascu… Aleen …
#> 3 Wicket Syst…     88    20 brown   brown   brown         8 male  mascu… Endor  
#> 4 Dud Bolt         94    45 none    blue, … yellow       NA male  mascu… Vulpter
#> # … with 83 more rows, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld

Use desc() to order a column in descending order:

starwars %>% arrange(desc(height))
#> # A tibble: 87 × 14
#>   name        height  mass hair_c…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>        <int> <dbl> <chr>    <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Yarael Poof    264    NA none     white   yellow       NA male  mascu… Quermia
#> 2 Tarfful        234   136 brown    brown   blue         NA male  mascu… Kashyy…
#> 3 Lama Su        229    88 none     grey    black        NA male  mascu… Kamino 
#> 4 Chewbacca      228   112 brown    unknown blue        200 male  mascu… Kashyy…
#> # … with 83 more rows, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld

Choose rows using their position with slice()

slice() lets you index rows by their (integer) locations. It allows you to select, remove, and duplicate rows.

We can get characters from row numbers 5 through 10.

starwars %>% slice(5:10)
#> # A tibble: 6 × 14
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Leia Organa     150    49 brown   light   brown        19 fema… femin… Aldera…
#> 2 Owen Lars       178   120 brown,… light   blue         52 male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 3 Beru Whites…    165    75 brown   light   blue         47 fema… femin… Tatooi…
#> 4 R5-D4            97    32 <NA>    white,… red          NA none  mascu… Tatooi…
#> # … with 2 more rows, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld

It is accompanied by a number of helpers for common use cases:

starwars %>% slice_head(n = 3)
#> # A tibble: 3 × 14
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Luke Skywal…    172    77 blond   fair    blue         19 male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 2 C-3PO           167    75 <NA>    gold    yellow      112 none  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 3 R2-D2            96    32 <NA>    white,… red          33 none  mascu… Naboo  
#> # … with 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>, vehicles <list>,
#> #   starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color,
#> #   ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld
starwars %>% slice_sample(n = 5)
#> # A tibble: 5 × 14
#>   name     height  mass hair_color skin_c…¹ eye_c…² birth…³ sex   gender homew…⁴
#>   <chr>     <int> <dbl> <chr>      <chr>    <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Dud Bolt     94    45 none       blue, g… yellow       NA male  mascu… Vulpter
#> 2 Bossk       190   113 none       green    red          53 male  mascu… Trando…
#> 3 Shaak Ti    178    57 none       red, bl… black        NA fema… femin… Shili  
#> 4 Dormé       165    NA brown      light    brown        NA fema… femin… Naboo  
#> # … with 1 more row, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​skin_color, ²​eye_color, ³​birth_year, ⁴​homeworld
starwars %>% slice_sample(prop = 0.1)
#> # A tibble: 8 × 14
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Qui-Gon Jinn    193    89 brown   fair    blue         92 male  mascu… <NA>   
#> 2 Dexter Jett…    198   102 none    brown   yellow       NA male  mascu… Ojom   
#> 3 R4-P17           96    NA none    silver… red, b…      NA none  femin… <NA>   
#> 4 Lama Su         229    88 none    grey    black        NA male  mascu… Kamino 
#> # … with 4 more rows, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld

Use replace = TRUE to perform a bootstrap sample. If needed, you can weight the sample with the weight argument.

starwars %>%
  filter(!is.na(height)) %>%
  slice_max(height, n = 3)
#> # A tibble: 3 × 14
#>   name        height  mass hair_c…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>        <int> <dbl> <chr>    <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Yarael Poof    264    NA none     white   yellow       NA male  mascu… Quermia
#> 2 Tarfful        234   136 brown    brown   blue         NA male  mascu… Kashyy…
#> 3 Lama Su        229    88 none     grey    black        NA male  mascu… Kamino 
#> # … with 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>, vehicles <list>,
#> #   starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color,
#> #   ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld

Select columns with select()

Often you work with large datasets with many columns but only a few are actually of interest to you. select() allows you to rapidly zoom in on a useful subset using operations that usually only work on numeric variable positions:

# Select columns by name
starwars %>% select(hair_color, skin_color, eye_color)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 3
#>   hair_color skin_color  eye_color
#>   <chr>      <chr>       <chr>    
#> 1 blond      fair        blue     
#> 2 <NA>       gold        yellow   
#> 3 <NA>       white, blue red      
#> 4 none       white       yellow   
#> # … with 83 more rows
# Select all columns between hair_color and eye_color (inclusive)
starwars %>% select(hair_color:eye_color)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 3
#>   hair_color skin_color  eye_color
#>   <chr>      <chr>       <chr>    
#> 1 blond      fair        blue     
#> 2 <NA>       gold        yellow   
#> 3 <NA>       white, blue red      
#> 4 none       white       yellow   
#> # … with 83 more rows
# Select all columns except those from hair_color to eye_color (inclusive)
starwars %>% select(!(hair_color:eye_color))
#> # A tibble: 87 × 11
#>   name   height  mass birth…¹ sex   gender homew…² species films vehic…³ stars…⁴
#>   <chr>   <int> <dbl>   <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>   <chr>   <lis> <list>  <list> 
#> 1 Luke …    172    77    19   male  mascu… Tatooi… Human   <chr> <chr>   <chr>  
#> 2 C-3PO     167    75   112   none  mascu… Tatooi… Droid   <chr> <chr>   <chr>  
#> 3 R2-D2      96    32    33   none  mascu… Naboo   Droid   <chr> <chr>   <chr>  
#> 4 Darth…    202   136    41.9 male  mascu… Tatooi… Human   <chr> <chr>   <chr>  
#> # … with 83 more rows, and abbreviated variable names ¹​birth_year, ²​homeworld,
#> #   ³​vehicles, ⁴​starships
# Select all columns ending with color
starwars %>% select(ends_with("color"))
#> # A tibble: 87 × 3
#>   hair_color skin_color  eye_color
#>   <chr>      <chr>       <chr>    
#> 1 blond      fair        blue     
#> 2 <NA>       gold        yellow   
#> 3 <NA>       white, blue red      
#> 4 none       white       yellow   
#> # … with 83 more rows

There are a number of helper functions you can use within select(), like starts_with(), ends_with(), matches() and contains(). These let you quickly match larger blocks of variables that meet some criterion. See ?select for more details.

You can rename variables with select() by using named arguments:

starwars %>% select(home_world = homeworld)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 1
#>   home_world
#>   <chr>     
#> 1 Tatooine  
#> 2 Tatooine  
#> 3 Naboo     
#> 4 Tatooine  
#> # … with 83 more rows

But because select() drops all the variables not explicitly mentioned, it’s not that useful. Instead, use rename():

starwars %>% rename(home_world = homeworld)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 14
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender home_…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Luke Skywal…    172    77 blond   fair    blue       19   male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 2 C-3PO           167    75 <NA>    gold    yellow    112   none  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 3 R2-D2            96    32 <NA>    white,… red        33   none  mascu… Naboo  
#> 4 Darth Vader     202   136 none    white   yellow     41.9 male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> # … with 83 more rows, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​home_world

Add new columns with mutate()

Besides selecting sets of existing columns, it’s often useful to add new columns that are functions of existing columns. This is the job of mutate():

starwars %>% mutate(height_m = height / 100)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 15
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Luke Skywal…    172    77 blond   fair    blue       19   male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 2 C-3PO           167    75 <NA>    gold    yellow    112   none  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 3 R2-D2            96    32 <NA>    white,… red        33   none  mascu… Naboo  
#> 4 Darth Vader     202   136 none    white   yellow     41.9 male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> # … with 83 more rows, 5 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, height_m <dbl>, and abbreviated variable
#> #   names ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld

We can’t see the height in meters we just calculated, but we can fix that using a select command.

starwars %>%
  mutate(height_m = height / 100) %>%
  select(height_m, height, everything())
#> # A tibble: 87 × 15
#>   height_m height name         mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender
#>      <dbl>  <int> <chr>       <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr> 
#> 1     1.72    172 Luke Skywa…    77 blond   fair    blue       19   male  mascu…
#> 2     1.67    167 C-3PO          75 <NA>    gold    yellow    112   none  mascu…
#> 3     0.96     96 R2-D2          32 <NA>    white,… red        33   none  mascu…
#> 4     2.02    202 Darth Vader   136 none    white   yellow     41.9 male  mascu…
#> # … with 83 more rows, 5 more variables: homeworld <chr>, species <chr>,
#> #   films <list>, vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable
#> #   names ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year

dplyr::mutate() is similar to the base transform(), but allows you to refer to columns that you’ve just created:

starwars %>%
  mutate(
    height_m = height / 100,
    BMI = mass / (height_m^2)
  ) %>%
  select(BMI, everything())
#> # A tibble: 87 × 16
#>     BMI name   height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <dbl> <chr>   <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1  26.0 Luke …    172    77 blond   fair    blue       19   male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 2  26.9 C-3PO     167    75 <NA>    gold    yellow    112   none  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 3  34.7 R2-D2      96    32 <NA>    white,… red        33   none  mascu… Naboo  
#> 4  33.3 Darth…    202   136 none    white   yellow     41.9 male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> # … with 83 more rows, 5 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, height_m <dbl>, and abbreviated variable
#> #   names ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld

If you only want to keep the new variables, use transmute():

starwars %>%
  transmute(
    height_m = height / 100,
    BMI = mass / (height_m^2)
  )
#> # A tibble: 87 × 2
#>   height_m   BMI
#>      <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1     1.72  26.0
#> 2     1.67  26.9
#> 3     0.96  34.7
#> 4     2.02  33.3
#> # … with 83 more rows

Change column order with relocate()

Use a similar syntax as select() to move blocks of columns at once

starwars %>% relocate(sex:homeworld, .before = height)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 14
#>   name         sex   gender homew…¹ height  mass hair_…² skin_…³ eye_c…⁴ birth…⁵
#>   <chr>        <chr> <chr>  <chr>    <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl>
#> 1 Luke Skywal… male  mascu… Tatooi…    172    77 blond   fair    blue       19  
#> 2 C-3PO        none  mascu… Tatooi…    167    75 <NA>    gold    yellow    112  
#> 3 R2-D2        none  mascu… Naboo       96    32 <NA>    white,… red        33  
#> 4 Darth Vader  male  mascu… Tatooi…    202   136 none    white   yellow     41.9
#> # … with 83 more rows, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​homeworld, ²​hair_color, ³​skin_color, ⁴​eye_color, ⁵​birth_year

Summarise values with summarise()

The last verb is summarise(). It collapses a data frame to a single row.

starwars %>% summarise(height = mean(height, na.rm = TRUE))
#> # A tibble: 1 × 1
#>   height
#>    <dbl>
#> 1   174.

It’s not that useful until we learn the group_by() verb below.

Commonalities

You may have noticed that the syntax and function of all these verbs are very similar:

Together these properties make it easy to chain together multiple simple steps to achieve a complex result.

These five functions provide the basis of a language of data manipulation. At the most basic level, you can only alter a tidy data frame in five useful ways: you can reorder the rows (arrange()), pick observations and variables of interest (filter() and select()), add new variables that are functions of existing variables (mutate()), or collapse many values to a summary (summarise()).

Combining functions with %>%

The dplyr API is functional in the sense that function calls don’t have side-effects. You must always save their results. This doesn’t lead to particularly elegant code, especially if you want to do many operations at once. You either have to do it step-by-step:

a1 <- group_by(starwars, species, sex)
a2 <- select(a1, height, mass)
a3 <- summarise(a2,
  height = mean(height, na.rm = TRUE),
  mass = mean(mass, na.rm = TRUE)
)

Or if you don’t want to name the intermediate results, you need to wrap the function calls inside each other:

summarise(
  select(
    group_by(starwars, species, sex),
    height, mass
  ),
  height = mean(height, na.rm = TRUE),
  mass = mean(mass, na.rm = TRUE)
)
#> Adding missing grouping variables: `species`, `sex`
#> `summarise()` has grouped output by 'species'. You can override using the
#> `.groups` argument.
#> # A tibble: 41 × 4
#> # Groups:   species [38]
#>   species  sex   height  mass
#>   <chr>    <chr>  <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 Aleena   male      79    15
#> 2 Besalisk male     198   102
#> 3 Cerean   male     198    82
#> 4 Chagrian male     196   NaN
#> # … with 37 more rows

This is difficult to read because the order of the operations is from inside to out. Thus, the arguments are a long way away from the function. To get around this problem, dplyr provides the %>% operator from magrittr. x %>% f(y) turns into f(x, y) so you can use it to rewrite multiple operations that you can read left-to-right, top-to-bottom (reading the pipe operator as “then”):

starwars %>%
  group_by(species, sex) %>%
  select(height, mass) %>%
  summarise(
    height = mean(height, na.rm = TRUE),
    mass = mean(mass, na.rm = TRUE)
  )

Patterns of operations

The dplyr verbs can be classified by the type of operations they accomplish (we sometimes speak of their semantics, i.e., their meaning). It’s helpful to have a good grasp of the difference between select and mutate operations.

Selecting operations

One of the appealing features of dplyr is that you can refer to columns from the tibble as if they were regular variables. However, the syntactic uniformity of referring to bare column names hides semantical differences across the verbs. A column symbol supplied to select() does not have the same meaning as the same symbol supplied to mutate().

Selecting operations expect column names and positions. Hence, when you call select() with bare variable names, they actually represent their own positions in the tibble. The following calls are completely equivalent from dplyr’s point of view:

# `name` represents the integer 1
select(starwars, name)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 1
#>   name          
#>   <chr>         
#> 1 Luke Skywalker
#> 2 C-3PO         
#> 3 R2-D2         
#> 4 Darth Vader   
#> # … with 83 more rows
select(starwars, 1)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 1
#>   name          
#>   <chr>         
#> 1 Luke Skywalker
#> 2 C-3PO         
#> 3 R2-D2         
#> 4 Darth Vader   
#> # … with 83 more rows

By the same token, this means that you cannot refer to variables from the surrounding context if they have the same name as one of the columns. In the following example, height still represents 2, not 5:

height <- 5
select(starwars, height)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 1
#>   height
#>    <int>
#> 1    172
#> 2    167
#> 3     96
#> 4    202
#> # … with 83 more rows

One useful subtlety is that this only applies to bare names and to selecting calls like c(height, mass) or height:mass. In all other cases, the columns of the data frame are not put in scope. This allows you to refer to contextual variables in selection helpers:

name <- "color"
select(starwars, ends_with(name))
#> # A tibble: 87 × 3
#>   hair_color skin_color  eye_color
#>   <chr>      <chr>       <chr>    
#> 1 blond      fair        blue     
#> 2 <NA>       gold        yellow   
#> 3 <NA>       white, blue red      
#> 4 none       white       yellow   
#> # … with 83 more rows

These semantics are usually intuitive. But note the subtle difference:

name <- 5
select(starwars, name, identity(name))
#> # A tibble: 87 × 2
#>   name           skin_color 
#>   <chr>          <chr>      
#> 1 Luke Skywalker fair       
#> 2 C-3PO          gold       
#> 3 R2-D2          white, blue
#> 4 Darth Vader    white      
#> # … with 83 more rows

In the first argument, name represents its own position 1. In the second argument, name is evaluated in the surrounding context and represents the fifth column.

For a long time, select() used to only understand column positions. Counting from dplyr 0.6, it now understands column names as well. This makes it a bit easier to program with select():

vars <- c("name", "height")
select(starwars, all_of(vars), "mass")
#> # A tibble: 87 × 3
#>   name           height  mass
#>   <chr>           <int> <dbl>
#> 1 Luke Skywalker    172    77
#> 2 C-3PO             167    75
#> 3 R2-D2              96    32
#> 4 Darth Vader       202   136
#> # … with 83 more rows

Mutating operations

Mutate semantics are quite different from selection semantics. Whereas select() expects column names or positions, mutate() expects column vectors. We will set up a smaller tibble to use for our examples.

df <- starwars %>% select(name, height, mass)

When we use select(), the bare column names stand for their own positions in the tibble. For mutate() on the other hand, column symbols represent the actual column vectors stored in the tibble. Consider what happens if we give a string or a number to mutate():

mutate(df, "height", 2)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 5
#>   name           height  mass `"height"`   `2`
#>   <chr>           <int> <dbl> <chr>      <dbl>
#> 1 Luke Skywalker    172    77 height         2
#> 2 C-3PO             167    75 height         2
#> 3 R2-D2              96    32 height         2
#> 4 Darth Vader       202   136 height         2
#> # … with 83 more rows

mutate() gets length-1 vectors that it interprets as new columns in the data frame. These vectors are recycled so they match the number of rows. That’s why it doesn’t make sense to supply expressions like "height" + 10 to mutate(). This amounts to adding 10 to a string! The correct expression is:

mutate(df, height + 10)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 4
#>   name           height  mass `height + 10`
#>   <chr>           <int> <dbl>         <dbl>
#> 1 Luke Skywalker    172    77           182
#> 2 C-3PO             167    75           177
#> 3 R2-D2              96    32           106
#> 4 Darth Vader       202   136           212
#> # … with 83 more rows

In the same way, you can unquote values from the context if these values represent a valid column. They must be either length 1 (they then get recycled) or have the same length as the number of rows. In the following example we create a new vector that we add to the data frame:

var <- seq(1, nrow(df))
mutate(df, new = var)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 4
#>   name           height  mass   new
#>   <chr>           <int> <dbl> <int>
#> 1 Luke Skywalker    172    77     1
#> 2 C-3PO             167    75     2
#> 3 R2-D2              96    32     3
#> 4 Darth Vader       202   136     4
#> # … with 83 more rows

A case in point is group_by(). While you might think it has select semantics, it actually has mutate semantics. This is quite handy as it allows to group by a modified column:

group_by(starwars, sex)
#> # A tibble: 87 × 14
#> # Groups:   sex [5]
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Luke Skywal…    172    77 blond   fair    blue       19   male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 2 C-3PO           167    75 <NA>    gold    yellow    112   none  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 3 R2-D2            96    32 <NA>    white,… red        33   none  mascu… Naboo  
#> 4 Darth Vader     202   136 none    white   yellow     41.9 male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> # … with 83 more rows, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld
group_by(starwars, sex = as.factor(sex))
#> # A tibble: 87 × 14
#> # Groups:   sex [5]
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <fct> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Luke Skywal…    172    77 blond   fair    blue       19   male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 2 C-3PO           167    75 <NA>    gold    yellow    112   none  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 3 R2-D2            96    32 <NA>    white,… red        33   none  mascu… Naboo  
#> 4 Darth Vader     202   136 none    white   yellow     41.9 male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> # … with 83 more rows, 4 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, and abbreviated variable names
#> #   ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year, ⁵​homeworld
group_by(starwars, height_binned = cut(height, 3))
#> # A tibble: 87 × 15
#> # Groups:   height_binned [4]
#>   name         height  mass hair_…¹ skin_…² eye_c…³ birth…⁴ sex   gender homew…⁵
#>   <chr>         <int> <dbl> <chr>   <chr>   <chr>     <dbl> <chr> <chr>  <chr>  
#> 1 Luke Skywal…    172    77 blond   fair    blue       19   male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 2 C-3PO           167    75 <NA>    gold    yellow    112   none  mascu… Tatooi…
#> 3 R2-D2            96    32 <NA>    white,… red        33   none  mascu… Naboo  
#> 4 Darth Vader     202   136 none    white   yellow     41.9 male  mascu… Tatooi…
#> # … with 83 more rows, 5 more variables: species <chr>, films <list>,
#> #   vehicles <list>, starships <list>, height_binned <fct>, and abbreviated
#> #   variable names ¹​hair_color, ²​skin_color, ³​eye_color, ⁴​birth_year,
#> #   ⁵​homeworld

This is why you can’t supply a column name to group_by(). This amounts to creating a new column containing the string recycled to the number of rows:

group_by(df, "month")
#> # A tibble: 87 × 4
#> # Groups:   "month" [1]
#>   name           height  mass `"month"`
#>   <chr>           <int> <dbl> <chr>    
#> 1 Luke Skywalker    172    77 month    
#> 2 C-3PO             167    75 month    
#> 3 R2-D2              96    32 month    
#> 4 Darth Vader       202   136 month    
#> # … with 83 more rows