complement {BaseSet} | R Documentation |
Complement TidySet
Description
Use complement to find elements or sets the TidySet object. You can use activate with complement or use the specific function. You must specify if you want the complements of sets or elements.
Usage
complement(.data, ...)
Arguments
.data |
The TidySet object |
... |
Other arguments passed to either |
Value
A TidySet object
See Also
Other complements:
complement_element()
,
complement_set()
,
subtract()
Other methods:
TidySet-class
,
activate()
,
add_column()
,
add_relation()
,
arrange.TidySet()
,
cartesian()
,
complement_element()
,
complement_set()
,
element_size()
,
elements()
,
filter.TidySet()
,
group_by.TidySet()
,
group()
,
incidence()
,
intersection()
,
is.fuzzy()
,
is_nested()
,
move_to()
,
mutate.TidySet()
,
nElements()
,
nRelations()
,
nSets()
,
name_elements<-()
,
name_sets<-()
,
name_sets()
,
power_set()
,
pull.TidySet()
,
relations()
,
remove_column()
,
remove_element()
,
remove_relation()
,
remove_set()
,
rename_elements()
,
rename_set()
,
select.TidySet()
,
set_size()
,
sets()
,
subtract()
,
union()
Examples
rel <- data.frame(
sets = c("A", "A", "B", "B", "C", "C"),
elements = letters[seq_len(6)],
fuzzy = runif(6)
)
TS <- tidySet(rel)
TS %>%
activate("elements") %>%
complement("a")
TS %>%
activate("elements") %>%
complement("a", "C_a", keep = FALSE)
TS %>%
activate("set") %>%
complement("A")
TS %>%
activate("set") %>%
complement("A", keep = FALSE)
TS %>%
activate("set") %>%
complement("A", FUN = function(x){abs(x - 0.2)}, keep = FALSE)