Controlling other aspects of the string
Not only does format() control the way the number is represented, it also controls some of the properties of the resulting string that affect its display.
For example, by default format() will pad the start of the strings with spaces so that the decimal points line up, which is really useful if you are presenting the numbers in a vertical column. However, if you are putting the number in the middle of a sentence, you might not want these extra spaces. You can set trim = TRUE to remove them.
When numbers are long it can be helpful to "prettify" them, for example instead of 1000000000 display 1,000,000,000. In this case a , is added every 3 digits. This can be controlled by the big.interval and big.mark arguments, e.g. format(1000000000, big.mark = ",", big.interval = 3, scientific = FALSE). These arguments are actually passed on to prettyNum() so head there for any further details.
Este exercício faz parte do curso
String Manipulation with stringr in R
Instruções do exercício
We've assigned your formatted income from the previous exercise to formatted_income.
- Print
formatted_incomeNotice the spaces at the start of the strings. - Call
writeLines()on the formattedincome. Notice how the numbers line up on the decimal point. - Define
trimmed_incomeby usingformat()onincomewithdigits = 2andtrim = TRUE. - Call
writeLines()ontrimmed_income. Notice how this removes the spaces at the start of the strings and the values line up on left. - Define
pretty_incomeby usingformat()onincomewithdigits = 2andbig.mark = ",". - Call
writeLines()onpretty_income.
Exercício interativo prático
Experimente este exercício completando este código de exemplo.
formatted_income <- format(income, digits = 2)
# Print formatted_income
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# Call writeLines() on the formatted income
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# Define trimmed_income
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# Call writeLines() on the trimmed_income
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# Define pretty_income
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# Call writeLines() on the pretty_income
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