Extract draws from a Bayesian fit into a wide-format data frame with a
.chain
, .iteration
, and .draw
column, as well as all variables
as columns. While this function can be useful for quick glances at models (especially
combined with gather_variables()
and median_qi()
), it is
generally speaking not as useful as spread_draws()
or
gather_draws()
for most applications, and is mainly used internally (see Details).
tidy_draws(model)# S3 method for default
tidy_draws(model)
# S3 method for data.frame
tidy_draws(model)
# S3 method for mcmc.list
tidy_draws(model)
# S3 method for stanfit
tidy_draws(model)
# S3 method for stanreg
tidy_draws(model)
# S3 method for runjags
tidy_draws(model)
# S3 method for jagsUI
tidy_draws(model)
# S3 method for brmsfit
tidy_draws(model)
# S3 method for matrix
tidy_draws(model)
# S3 method for MCMCglmm
tidy_draws(model)
A supported Bayesian model fit object. See tidybayes-models()
for a list of supported
models.
A data frame (actually, a tibble) with a .chain
column,
.iteration
column, .draw
column, and one column for every variable in model
.
In practice, apart from quick looks at a model you will probably not call this directly;
spread_draws()
or gather_draws()
, which are build on top of this
function, provide support for extracting variable dimensions are so are often more useful.
To provide support for new models in tidybayes,
you must provide an implementation of this function or an implementation
of coda::as.mcmc.list()
(tidy_draws
should work on any model
with an implementation of coda::as.mcmc.list()
)
tidy_draws
can be applied to a data frame that is already a tidy-format data frame
of draws, provided it has one row per draw. In other words, it can be applied to data frames
that have the same format it returns, and it will return the same data frame back, while
checking to ensure the .chain
, .iteration
, and .draw
columns are all
integers (converting if possible) and that the .draw
column is unique. This allows
you to pass already-tidy-format data frames into other tidybayes functions, like
spread_draws()
or gather_draws()
.
spread_draws()
or gather_draws()
, which use this function
internally and provides a friendly interface for extracting tidy data frames from model fits.
# NOT RUN {
library(magrittr)
data(line, package = "coda")
line %>%
tidy_draws()
# }
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