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tibble

Overview

A tibble, or tbl_df, is a modern reimagining of the data.frame, keeping what time has proven to be effective, and throwing out what is not. Tibbles are data.frames that are lazy and surly: they do less (i.e. they don’t change variable names or types, and don’t do partial matching) and complain more (e.g. when a variable does not exist). This forces you to confront problems earlier, typically leading to cleaner, more expressive code. Tibbles also have an enhanced print() method which makes them easier to use with large datasets containing complex objects.

If you are new to tibbles, the best place to start is the tibbles chapter in R for data science.

Installation

# The easiest way to get tibble is to install the whole tidyverse:
install.packages("tidyverse")

# Alternatively, install just tibble:
install.packages("tibble")

# Or the the development version from GitHub:
# install.packages("pak")
pak::pak("tidyverse/tibble")

Usage

library(tibble)

Create a tibble from an existing object with as_tibble():

data <- data.frame(a = 1:3, b = letters[1:3], c = Sys.Date() - 1:3)
data
#>   a b          c
#> 1 1 a 2025-03-18
#> 2 2 b 2025-03-17
#> 3 3 c 2025-03-16

as_tibble(data)
#> # A tibble: 3 × 3
#>       a b     c         
#>   <int> <chr> <date>    
#> 1     1 a     2025-03-18
#> 2     2 b     2025-03-17
#> 3     3 c     2025-03-16

This will work for reasonable inputs that are already data.frames, lists, matrices, or tables.

You can also create a new tibble from column vectors with tibble():

tibble(x = 1:5, y = 1, z = x^2 + y)
#> # A tibble: 5 × 3
#>       x     y     z
#>   <int> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1     1     1     2
#> 2     2     1     5
#> 3     3     1    10
#> 4     4     1    17
#> 5     5     1    26

tibble() does much less than data.frame(): it never changes the type of the inputs (e.g. it keeps list columns as is), it never changes the names of variables, it only recycles inputs of length 1, and it never creates row.names(). You can read more about these features in vignette("tibble").

You can define a tibble row-by-row with tribble():

tribble(
  ~x, ~y,  ~z,
  "a", 2,  3.6,
  "b", 1,  8.5
)
#> # A tibble: 2 × 3
#>   x         y     z
#>   <chr> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 a         2   3.6
#> 2 b         1   8.5

Related work

The tibble print method draws inspiration from data.table, and frame. Like data.table::data.table(), tibble() doesn’t change column names and doesn’t use rownames.


Code of Conduct

Please note that the tibble project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms.

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Install

install.packages('tibble')

Monthly Downloads

1,255,480

Version

3.3.0

License

MIT + file LICENSE

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Maintainer

Kirill M<c3><bc>ller

Last Published

June 8th, 2025

Functions in tibble (3.3.0)

tbl_df-class

tbl_df class
name-repair

Name repair
new_tibble

Tibble constructor and validator
tibble-package

tibble: Simple Data Frames
lst

Build a list
rownames

Tools for working with row names
name-repair-superseded

Superseded functions for name repair
subsetting

Subsetting tibbles
num

Format a numeric vector
view

View an object
trunc_mat

Legacy printing
tibble_options

Package options
reexports

Objects exported from other packages
tribble

Row-wise tibble creation
tibble

Build a data frame