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Names & pipe refresher

It is easy to determine if a list has names using names(). Understanding the named elements of a list can make working with the list elements easier because you can pull out the information you need by name, instead of searching for the correct numbered element.

purrr is a part of the tidyverse, a system of packages designed to be used together, and used with pipes. Let's do a quick refresh on how pipes work. A pipe %>% takes the output from the function that comes before it, and feeds it into the function that comes after the pipe as its first argument.

function_before() %>% 
    function_after()

You don't need to use pipes when you use purrr functions, but for the purposes of these lessons, you will be.

Este ejercicio forma parte del curso

Foundations of Functional Programming with purrr

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Instrucciones del ejercicio

  • Check to see if the sw_films list has named elements with pipes.

Ejercicio interactivo práctico

Prueba este ejercicio y completa el código de muestra.

# Use pipes to check for names in sw_films
___ %>%
    ___()
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