top_n {dplyr} | R Documentation |
This is a convenient wrapper that uses filter()
and
min_rank()
to select the top or bottom entries in each group,
ordered by wt
.
top_n(x, n, wt)
x |
a |
n |
number of rows to return. If If |
wt |
(Optional). The variable to use for ordering. If not specified, defaults to the last variable in the tbl. This argument is automatically quoted and later
evaluated in the context of the data
frame. It supports unquoting. See
|
df <- data.frame(x = c(10, 4, 1, 6, 3, 1, 1)) df %>% top_n(2) # Negative values select bottom from group. Note that we get more # than 2 values here because there's a tie: top_n() either takes # all rows with a value, or none. df %>% top_n(-2) if (require("Lahman")) { # Find 10 players with most games # A little nicer with %>% tbl_df(Batting) %>% group_by(playerID) %>% tally(G) %>% top_n(10) # Find year with most games for each player tbl_df(Batting) %>% group_by(playerID) %>% top_n(1, G) }