Convert a numeric vector to a character vector in which the numbers are formatted in power-of-ten notation in scientific form and delimited for rendering as inline equations in an R markdown document.
Usage
format_sci(
x,
digits = 4,
...,
omit_power = c(-1, 2),
set_power = NULL,
delim = formatdown_options("delim"),
size = formatdown_options("size"),
decimal_mark = formatdown_options("decimal_mark"),
small_mark = formatdown_options("small_mark"),
small_interval = formatdown_options("small_interval"),
whitespace = formatdown_options("whitespace"),
multiply_mark = formatdown_options("multiply_mark")
)Arguments
- x
Number or numbers to be formatted. Can be a single number, a vector, or a column of a data frame.
- digits
Integer from 1 through 20 that controls the number of significant digits in printed numeric values. Passed to
signif(). Default is 4.- ...
Not used for values; forces subsequent arguments to be referable only by name.
- omit_power
Numeric vector
c(p, q)withp <= q, specifying the range of exponents over which power-of-ten notation is omitted in either scientific or engineering format. Default isc(-1, 2). If a single value is assigned, i.e.,omit_power = p, the argument is interpreted asc(p, p). IfNULLorNA, all elements are formatted in power-of-ten notation. Argument is overridden by specifyingset_poweror decimal notation.- set_power
Integer, length 1. Formats all values in
xwith the same power-of-ten exponent. Default NULL. Overridesformatandomit_powerarguments.- delim
Character, length 1 or 2, to define the left and right math markup delimiters. The default setting,
delim = "$", produces left and right delimiters$...$. The alternate built-in setting,delim = "\\(", produces left and right delimiters\\( ... \\). Custom delimiters can be assigned in a vector of length 2 with left and right delimiter symbols, e.g.,c("\\[", "\\]"). Special characters typically must be escaped.- size
Character, length 1, to assign a font size. If not empty, adds a font size macro to the markup inside the math delimiters. Possible values are
"scriptsize","small","normalsize","large", and"huge". One may also assign the equivalent LaTeX-style markup itself, e.g.,"\\scriptsize","\\small", etc. Default is NULL.- decimal_mark
Character, length 1, to assign the decimal marker. Possible values are a period
"."(default) or a comma",". Passed toformatC(decimal.mark).- small_mark
Character, length 1, used as the mark between every
small_intervalnumber of digits to the right of the decimal marker to improve readability. Possible values are empty""(default) or"thin"to produce a LaTeX-style thin, horizontal space. One may also assign the thin-space markup itself"\\\\,". Passed toformatC(small.mark).- small_interval
Integer, length 1, that defines the number of digits (default 5) in groups separated by
small_mark. Passed toformatC(small.interval).- whitespace
Character, length 1, to define the LaTeX-style math-mode macro to preserve a horizontal space between words of text or between physical-unit abbreviations when formatting numbers of class "units". Default is
"\\\\ ". Alternatives include"\\\\:"or "\\\\>".- multiply_mark
Character, length 1, to define the multiplication symbol in power of ten notation. Possible values are
"\\times"(default) or a half-high dot"\\cdot"which is often used when the decimal mark is a comma.
Value
A character vector in which numbers are formatted in power-of-ten notation in scientific form and delimited for rendering as inline equations in an R markdown document.
Details
format_sci() is a wrapper for the more general function format_numbers().
Where defaults are defined by formatdown_options(), users may reassign
the arguments locally in the function call or globally using
formatdown_options().
Arguments after the dots (...) must be referred to by name.
See also
Other format_*:
format_dcml(),
format_engr(),
format_numbers(),
format_text()
Examples
# input: single number
x <- 6.0221E+23
format_sci(x)
#> [1] "$6.022 \\times 10^{23}$"
# input: units class
x <- 103400
units(x) <- "N m2 C-2"
format_sci(x)
#> [1] "$1.034 \\times 10^{5}\\ \\mathrm{N\\ m^{2}\\ C^{-2}}$"
# input: vector
data("metals", package = "formatdown")
x <- metals$dens
format_sci(x)
#> [1] "$2.700 \\times 10^{3}$" "$8.900 \\times 10^{3}$" "$1.134 \\times 10^{4}$"
#> [4] "$2.145 \\times 10^{4}$" "$7.850 \\times 10^{3}$" "$4.850 \\times 10^{3}$"
# significant digits
x <- 9.75358e+5
format_sci(x, 2)
#> [1] "$9.8 \\times 10^{5}$"
format_sci(x, 3)
#> [1] "$9.75 \\times 10^{5}$"
format_sci(x, 4)
#> [1] "$9.754 \\times 10^{5}$"
# input: data frame
x <- metals[, c("thrm_exp", "thrm_cond")]
as.data.frame(apply(x, 2, format_sci, digits = 3))
#> thrm_exp thrm_cond
#> 1 $2.43 \\times 10^{-5}$ $156$
#> 2 $1.66 \\times 10^{-5}$ $393$
#> 3 $5.27 \\times 10^{-5}$ $37.0$
#> 4 $9.00 \\times 10^{-6}$ $69.2$
#> 5 $1.13 \\times 10^{-5}$ $46.7$
#> 6 $9.36 \\times 10^{-6}$ $7.44$
# format_sci() same as format_numbers(..., format = "sci")
x <- 6.0221E+23
format_sci(x)
#> [1] "$6.022 \\times 10^{23}$"
format_numbers(x, format = "sci")
#> [1] "$6.022 \\times 10^{23}$"
# omit_power
x <- 103400
format_sci(x, omit_power = c(-1, 2)) # default
#> [1] "$1.034 \\times 10^{5}$"
format_sci(x, omit_power = c(-1, 5))
#> [1] "$103400$"
format_sci(x, omit_power = 5) # equivalent to omit_power = c(5, 5)
#> [1] "$103400$"
# omit_power = NULL, power-of-ten notation for all elements
x <- c(1.2, 103400)
format_sci(x)
#> [1] "$1.200$" "$1.034 \\times 10^{5}$"
format_sci(x, omit_power = NULL)
#> [1] "$1.200 \\times 10^{0}$" "$1.034 \\times 10^{5}$"
# set_power overrides default scientific exponent
x <- 103400
format_sci(x)
#> [1] "$1.034 \\times 10^{5}$"
format_sci(x, set_power = 4)
#> [1] "$10.34 \\times 10^{4}$"
# set_power overrides omit_power
x <- 103400
format_sci(x)
#> [1] "$1.034 \\times 10^{5}$"
format_sci(x, omit_power = 5)
#> [1] "$103400$"
format_sci(x, omit_power = 5, set_power = 4)
#> [1] "$10.34 \\times 10^{4}$"
