I've seen that the table tag has a do not use in its information.
In the R language the table
function is fairly useful and delivers a matrix/array data-object. Is there a mechanism to support a language-specific r-table or [r:table] tag?
It seems like the table tag was deleted: https://stackoverflow.com/tags/table/
So this question no longer arises.
(And as to the original question, the concept of 'statistical table' (as a 2D matrix/array object with a well-defined set of numerical methods, e.g. pivot, aggregate, etc., as opposed to SQL or web or formatting tables) is not specific to R, it occurs in Python Pandas, Spark, and other languages/tools.)
[table]
have been expunged. The use in R is a bit different than a statistical "table". I was thinking of it more as a verb to create a possibly multiway tabulation, i.e. a count within an array structure. I suppose a [tabulate] tag can substitute. But what happened was that the ambiguity-driven decision to burminate the tag resulted in a loss of useful tagging. I think that rather than simply deleting the tag, that it should have been migrated. At the moment that are exactly 8 [tabulate[ tags associated with [r]. Should be many more.
table
is a verb that created an array (with more than 2 dimensions) or matrix-like object with class "table". .) I do think that [tabulate] could be used and my whinging was that the wholesale removal of the [table] tag in association with an [r] tag might better have been a more careful substitution with [tabulate].
table
, aggregate
, and tapply
verbs in R as well as any equivalents in any other language. I guess [tabulate] or [aggregate] would suffice. I'll mark as accepted.
::
is thepackage::function
mechanism and colon is used in some other argument and formula interpretations.data.table
is a package with the same named function as its constructor. It is NOT the same attable
.table
as in statisticaltabulate/tabulation
(not necessarily usingbase::tabulate
, could equally be,summarize/ aggregate/ xtabs/ prop.table/ margin.table
etc. or b)data.table
package (or c) some other generic language-agnostic sense, such as Shiny/Jupyter/HTML/JSON et al. tables). I will write an answer here. For a) we probably want tabulate, for b) data.table, for c) arguably should use a generic tag (e.g. html-table) or no tag, since it will be misused