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sierrajohnson committed Aug 15, 2024
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Expand Up @@ -27,17 +27,46 @@ The purrr package makes applying your functions to multiple elements of a list o
- `reduce` 1 output
- `predicate` TRUE/FALSE logical output

### `map()`
### `map()` family

Detailled map example
Map is used to apply the same function multiple times. It can work on lists, data frames, and other things. The first argument, `.x` is the object, the second argument, `.f` is the function you want to apply. Here is a simple example of how map is used.

### `reduce`()`
```{r}
x <- list(1,2,3)
Detailled map example
map(.x = x, .f = sqrt)
### `predicate`()`
```
However, the example above isn't that useful because the data could have easily been a vector. The `map` functionality becomes more important when you consider a more complex object like a data frame and a function that doesn't work with a regular mutate. We can create a custom function, then apply that to a column in mtcars.

```{r}
```

Often, it's easier to describe the function inside the map call, this is when you can create an anonymous function using `~`.

In this more useful example, the base R function `split` is used to create a list of data frames. `map` is then used to fit a regression model with the `lm` function for each group. Note that the first time `~` appears, it's creating the anonymous function, then it is used within `lm` as part of the formula.

```{r}
Detailled map example
by_cyl <- split(mtcars, mtcars$cyl)
by_cyl |>
map(~ lm(mpg ~ wt, data = .x)) |>
map(coef) |>
map_dbl(2)
```

`map` takes only one argument and always outputs a list. If you want to use multiple arguments, variants such as `map2` and `pmap` will work. If you want to output something other than a list, there are suffixs such as `_chr` and `_dbl`.


### `reduce`()`

Detailled reduce example

### `predicate`()`

Example here

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