Replacing with backreferences
The replacement argument to str_replace() can also include backreferences. This works just like specifying patterns with backreferences, except the capture happens in the pattern argument, and the backreference is used in the replacement argument.
x <- c("hello", "sweet", "kitten")
str_replace(x, capture(ANY_CHAR), str_c(REF1, REF1))
capture(ANY_CHAR) will match the first character no matter what it is. Then the replacement str_c(REF1, REF1) combines the captured character with itself, in effect doubling the first letter of each string.
You are going to use this to create some alternative, more lively accident narratives.
The strategy you'll take is to match words ending in "ING" then replace them with an adverb followed by the original word.
Bu egzersiz, kursun bir parçasıdır
String Manipulation with stringr in R
Egzersiz talimatları
- Build a pattern that finds words that end in
"ING". You'll want to check it againstnarrativesusingstr_view(). - Test out the replacement by using
str_replace()with your pattern (don't forget tocapture()it!) and a replacementstr_c("CARELESSLY", REF1, sep = " "). - Build a vector with one adverb for each narrative by sampling 10 elements from
adverbs. - Do the final replacement by using
str_c(adverbs_10, REF1, sep = " ").
Uygulamalı etkileşimli egzersiz
Bu egzersizi bu örnek kodu tamamlayarak deneyin.
# Build pattern to match words ending in "ING"
pattern <- ___
str_view(narratives, pattern)
# Test replacement
str_replace(narratives, ___, ___)
# One adverb per narrative
adverbs_10 <- ___
# Replace "***ing" with "adverb ***ly"
___