tar_plan {tarchetypes} | R Documentation |
A drake
-plan-like pipeline archetype
Description
Simplify target specification in pipelines.
Usage
tar_plan(...)
Arguments
... |
Named and unnamed targets. All named targets must follow
the |
Details
Allows targets with just targets and commands
to be written in the pipeline as target = command
instead of
tar_target(target, command)
. Also supports ordinary
target objects if they are unnamed.
tar_plan(x = 1, y = 2, tar_target(z, 3), tar_render(r, "r.Rmd"))
is equivalent to
list(tar_target(x, 1), tar_target(y, 2), tar_target(z, 3), tar_render(r, "r.Rmd"))
. # nolint
Value
A list of tar_target()
objects.
See the "Target objects" section for background.
Target objects
Most tarchetypes
functions are target factories,
which means they return target objects
or lists of target objects.
Target objects represent skippable steps of the analysis pipeline
as described at https://books.ropensci.org/targets/.
Please read the walkthrough at
https://books.ropensci.org/targets/walkthrough.html
to understand the role of target objects in analysis pipelines.
For developers, https://wlandau.github.io/targetopia/contributing.html#target-factories explains target factories (functions like this one which generate targets) and the design specification at https://books.ropensci.org/targets-design/ details the structure and composition of target objects.
Examples
if (identical(Sys.getenv("TAR_LONG_EXAMPLES"), "true")) {
targets::tar_dir({ # tar_dir() runs code from a temporary directory.
targets::tar_script({
library(tarchetypes)
tar_plan(
tarchetypes::tar_fst_tbl(data, data.frame(x = seq_len(26))),
means = colMeans(data) # No need for tar_target() for simple cases.
)
})
targets::tar_make()
})
}