Both challenges are due by the end of the day via Sakai on Wednesday May 3rd. For the first challenge, focused on data-tidying, you’ll want to refer back to our slides. For the second challenge, you’ll want to refer to the reference lab.
Tidy the data/gapminder_broadband_per_100.xlsx
file (Tip: use the readxl
package’s
read_excel()
function to import from Excel, and use
janitor::clean_names()
immediately after import to make
life easier)
Install and load the gapminder
data package (already
installed on RStudio Cloud).
install.packages("gapminder")
library(gapminder)
?gapminder
Pick at least two of the tasks below from the task menu and approach each with both a table and a figure.
dplyr
should be your main data manipulation toolggplot2
should be your main visualization toolMake observations about what your tables/figures show and about the process. If you want to do something comparable but different, i.e. swap one quantitative variable for another- go for it!
You do not have to use tidyr
or otherwise worry about
reshaping your tables. Many of your tables may not be formatted
perfectly in the report. Simply printing dplyr
tabular
output is fine. For all things, graphical and tabular, if you’re
dissatisfied with a result, discuss the problem, what you tried to do to
fix it, and move on.
For each table, make sure to include a relevant figure. One tip for
starting is to draw out on paper what you want your x- and y-axis to be
first and what your geom
is; that is, start by drawing the
plot you want ggplot
to give you. Your figure does not have
to depict every single number present in the table. Use your judgement.
It just needs to complement the table, add context, and allow for some
sanity checking.
Notice which figures are easy/hard to make, and whether the visualization adds clarity, detracts from, or is completely redundant (and therefore probably unnecessary) with respect to the tabular display.
You’re encouraged to reflect on what was hard/easy, problems you solved, helpful tutorials you read, etc.
Gapminder EDA ideas from Jenny Bryan, author and creator of the Gapminder package.