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For most modeling functions, data must be accepted from the user in
some format where the outcomes and predictors are both
specified. The next step is often to validate and preprocess that input
in some way to prepare it for the actual modeling implementation
function. For example, when a formula method is used, R provides some
infrastructure for preprocessing the user input through the
model.frame()
and model.matrix()
functions.
But the formula method is not the only way to specify modeling terms.
There is also an XY method, where x
and y
are
supplied directly, and, recently, a recipe
implementation
can be used to preprocess data using a set of sequential steps.
As a developer, you likely won’t want to care about the details of
how each of these methods work, but (hopefully) still want to provide
all three of these interfaces for your shiny new model.
mold()
makes this easy on you, and takes care of the
details of preprocessing user input from any of these methods.
The intended use of mold()
is to be called from your
user facing modeling function. To see that in action, have a look at the
vignette found here: vignette("package", "hardhat")
. The
rest of this vignette will be focused on the various different ways to
use mold()
, but keep in mind that generally it is not used
as an interactive function like this.
The most familiar interface for R users is likely the formula
interface. In this case, terms are specified using the formula notation:
outcomes ~ predictors
. Generally, as a developer, you have
to then call model.frame()
and model.matrix()
on this result to coerce it into the right format for ingestion into
your model. mold()
handles all of that for you.
penguin_form <- mold(body_mass_g ~ log(bill_length_mm), penguins)
names(penguin_form)
#> [1] "predictors" "outcomes" "blueprint" "extras"
mold()
returns four things. Two of them are immediately
useful, and are almost always applicable to the modeling implementation
you have created. The first is the predictors
, returned as
a tibble. All of the required processing has been done for you, so you
just have to focus on the modeling implementation.
penguin_form$predictors
#> # A tibble: 333 × 1
#> `log(bill_length_mm)`
#> <dbl>
#> 1 3.67
#> 2 3.68
#> 3 3.70
#> 4 3.60
#> 5 3.67
#> 6 3.66
#> 7 3.67
#> 8 3.72
#> 9 3.65
#> 10 3.54
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
Second is the outcomes
, also returned as a tibble. While
not used here, any processing on the outcome that was specified in the
formula would also be done here.
penguin_form$outcomes
#> # A tibble: 333 × 1
#> body_mass_g
#> <int>
#> 1 3750
#> 2 3800
#> 3 3250
#> 4 3450
#> 5 3650
#> 6 3625
#> 7 4675
#> 8 3200
#> 9 3800
#> 10 4400
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
Beyond these two elements, mold()
also returns a slot
for any extras
that might have been generated during
preprocessing, but aren’t specifically predictors or outcomes. For
example, an offset()
can be specified directly in the
formula, but isn’t technically a predictor.
mold(body_mass_g ~ log(bill_length_mm) + offset(bill_depth_mm), penguins)$extras
#> $offset
#> # A tibble: 333 × 1
#> .offset
#> <dbl>
#> 1 18.7
#> 2 17.4
#> 3 18
#> 4 19.3
#> 5 20.6
#> 6 17.8
#> 7 19.6
#> 8 17.6
#> 9 21.2
#> 10 21.1
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
Lastly, mold()
returns a very important object, the
blueprint
. This is responsible for knowing how to
preprocess both the training data, and any new data at prediction time.
As a developer, you should attach the blueprint
to your
model object before returning it to the user. For more information about
this, see the package development vignette,
vignette("package", "hardhat")
.
As mentioned above, one of the objects that mold()
returns is an blueprint
responsible for controlling the
preprocessing. There are multiple blueprints available in
hardhat
, but when you call mold()
one is
selected automatically for you. The following two calls generate the
same result, using the default formula blueprint.
identical(
mold(~ body_mass_g, penguins),
mold(~ body_mass_g, penguins, blueprint = default_formula_blueprint())
)
#> [1] TRUE
Each blueprint can be tweaked to change how the processing for that interface occurs, and the options vary per blueprint. To understand why you’d ever want to do this, read on!
Now that you have a basic idea of how mold()
works, we
can talk about some of the more interesting functionality.
One challenge with the standard formula interface is that, by
default, intercepts are always implicitly present and are added to your
data set automatically. This works great for the simple regression case.
However, other models might either always require or never allow an
intercept, but still use the formula interface because of its
convenience (for example, earth
). This has led to many ad
hoc solutions that prevent the user from removing or adding an
intercept.
To get around this, mold()
will never add an intercept
by default. Instead, the addition of an intercept is completely
controlled by the formula blueprint argument,
intercept
.
no_intercept <- mold(~ body_mass_g, penguins)
no_intercept$predictors
#> # A tibble: 333 × 1
#> body_mass_g
#> <dbl>
#> 1 3750
#> 2 3800
#> 3 3250
#> 4 3450
#> 5 3650
#> 6 3625
#> 7 4675
#> 8 3200
#> 9 3800
#> 10 4400
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
with_intercept <- mold(
~ body_mass_g, penguins,
blueprint = default_formula_blueprint(intercept = TRUE)
)
with_intercept$predictors
#> # A tibble: 333 × 2
#> `(Intercept)` body_mass_g
#> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 1 3750
#> 2 1 3800
#> 3 1 3250
#> 4 1 3450
#> 5 1 3650
#> 6 1 3625
#> 7 1 4675
#> 8 1 3200
#> 9 1 3800
#> 10 1 4400
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
An error is thrown if an intercept removal term is specified:
One of the nice things about the formula interface is that it expands
factors into dummy variable columns for you. Like intercepts, this is
great…until it isn’t. For example, ranger
fits a random
forest, which can take factors directly, but still uses the formula
notation. In this case, it would be great if the factor columns
specified as predictors weren’t expanded. This is the job of
the blueprint argument, indicators
.
expanded_dummies <- mold(~ body_mass_g + species, penguins)
expanded_dummies$predictors
#> # A tibble: 333 × 4
#> body_mass_g speciesAdelie speciesChinstrap speciesGentoo
#> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 3750 1 0 0
#> 2 3800 1 0 0
#> 3 3250 1 0 0
#> 4 3450 1 0 0
#> 5 3650 1 0 0
#> 6 3625 1 0 0
#> 7 4675 1 0 0
#> 8 3200 1 0 0
#> 9 3800 1 0 0
#> 10 4400 1 0 0
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
non_expanded_dummies <- mold(
~ body_mass_g + species, penguins,
blueprint = default_formula_blueprint(indicators = "none")
)
non_expanded_dummies$predictors
#> # A tibble: 333 × 2
#> body_mass_g species
#> <dbl> <fct>
#> 1 3750 Adelie
#> 2 3800 Adelie
#> 3 3250 Adelie
#> 4 3450 Adelie
#> 5 3650 Adelie
#> 6 3625 Adelie
#> 7 4675 Adelie
#> 8 3200 Adelie
#> 9 3800 Adelie
#> 10 4400 Adelie
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
Note: It’s worth mentioning that when an intercept is not
present, base R expands the first factor completely into K
indicator columns corresponding to the K
levels present in
that factor (also known as one-hot encoding). Subsequent columns are
expanded into the more traditional K - 1
columns. When an
intercept is present, K - 1
columns are generated for all
factor predictors.
One of the other frustrating things about working with the formula method is that multivariate outcomes are a bit clunky to specify.
.f <- cbind(body_mass_g, bill_length_mm) ~ bill_depth_mm
frame <- model.frame(.f, penguins)
head(frame)
#> cbind(body_mass_g, bill_length_mm).body_mass_g
#> 1 3750.0
#> 2 3800.0
#> 3 3250.0
#> 4 3450.0
#> 5 3650.0
#> 6 3625.0
#> cbind(body_mass_g, bill_length_mm).bill_length_mm bill_depth_mm
#> 1 39.1 18.7
#> 2 39.5 17.4
#> 3 40.3 18.0
#> 4 36.7 19.3
#> 5 39.3 20.6
#> 6 38.9 17.8
This might look like 3 columns, but it is actually 2, where the first
column is named cbind(body_mass_g, bill_length_mm)
, and it
is actually a matrix with 2 columns, body_mass_g
and
bill_length_mm
inside it.
head(frame$`cbind(body_mass_g, bill_length_mm)`)
#> body_mass_g bill_length_mm
#> [1,] 3750 39.1
#> [2,] 3800 39.5
#> [3,] 3250 40.3
#> [4,] 3450 36.7
#> [5,] 3650 39.3
#> [6,] 3625 38.9
The default formula blueprint used with mold()
allows
you to specify multiple outcomes like you specify multiple predictors.
You can even do inline transformations of each outcome, although if you
are doing very much of that, I’d advise using a recipe instead.
outcomes
then holds the two outcomes columns.
multivariate <- mold(body_mass_g + log(bill_length_mm) ~ bill_depth_mm, penguins)
multivariate$outcomes
#> # A tibble: 333 × 2
#> body_mass_g `log(bill_length_mm)`
#> <int> <dbl>
#> 1 3750 3.67
#> 2 3800 3.68
#> 3 3250 3.70
#> 4 3450 3.60
#> 5 3650 3.67
#> 6 3625 3.66
#> 7 4675 3.67
#> 8 3200 3.72
#> 9 3800 3.65
#> 10 4400 3.54
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
The second interface is the XY interface, useful when the predictors and outcomes are specified separately.
x <- subset(penguins, select = -body_mass_g)
y <- subset(penguins, select = body_mass_g)
penguin_xy <- mold(x, y)
penguin_xy$predictors
#> # A tibble: 333 × 6
#> species island bill_length_mm bill_depth_mm flipper_length_mm sex
#> <fct> <fct> <dbl> <dbl> <int> <fct>
#> 1 Adelie Torgersen 39.1 18.7 181 male
#> 2 Adelie Torgersen 39.5 17.4 186 female
#> 3 Adelie Torgersen 40.3 18 195 female
#> 4 Adelie Torgersen 36.7 19.3 193 female
#> 5 Adelie Torgersen 39.3 20.6 190 male
#> 6 Adelie Torgersen 38.9 17.8 181 female
#> 7 Adelie Torgersen 39.2 19.6 195 male
#> 8 Adelie Torgersen 41.1 17.6 182 female
#> 9 Adelie Torgersen 38.6 21.2 191 male
#> 10 Adelie Torgersen 34.6 21.1 198 male
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
penguin_xy$outcomes
#> # A tibble: 333 × 1
#> body_mass_g
#> <int>
#> 1 3750
#> 2 3800
#> 3 3250
#> 4 3450
#> 5 3650
#> 6 3625
#> 7 4675
#> 8 3200
#> 9 3800
#> 10 4400
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
This interface doesn’t do too much in the way of preprocessing, but
it does let you specify an intercept
in the blueprint
specific arguments. Rather than
default_formula_blueprint()
, this uses the
default_xy_blueprint()
.
xy_with_intercept <- mold(x, y, blueprint = default_xy_blueprint(intercept = TRUE))
xy_with_intercept$predictors
#> # A tibble: 333 × 7
#> `(Intercept)` species island bill_length_mm bill_depth_mm flipper_length_mm
#> <int> <fct> <fct> <dbl> <dbl> <int>
#> 1 1 Adelie Torgers… 39.1 18.7 181
#> 2 1 Adelie Torgers… 39.5 17.4 186
#> 3 1 Adelie Torgers… 40.3 18 195
#> 4 1 Adelie Torgers… 36.7 19.3 193
#> 5 1 Adelie Torgers… 39.3 20.6 190
#> 6 1 Adelie Torgers… 38.9 17.8 181
#> 7 1 Adelie Torgers… 39.2 19.6 195
#> 8 1 Adelie Torgers… 41.1 17.6 182
#> 9 1 Adelie Torgers… 38.6 21.2 191
#> 10 1 Adelie Torgers… 34.6 21.1 198
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
#> # ℹ 1 more variable: sex <fct>
y
is a bit special in the XY interface, because in the
univariate case users might expect to be able to pass a vector, a 1
column data frame, or a matrix. mold()
is prepared for all
of those cases, but the vector case requires special attention. To be
consistent with all of the other mold()
interfaces, the
outcomes
slot of the return value should be a tibble. To
achieve this when y
is supplied as a vector, a default
column name is created, ".outcome"
.
The last of the three interfaces is the relatively new recipes
interface. The default_recipe_blueprint()
knows how to
prep()
your recipe, and juice()
it to extract
the predictors and the outcomes. This is by far the most flexible way to
preprocess your data.
library(recipes)
rec <- recipe(bill_length_mm ~ species + bill_depth_mm, penguins) %>%
step_log(bill_length_mm) %>%
step_dummy(species)
penguin_recipe <- mold(rec, penguins)
penguin_recipe$predictors
#> # A tibble: 333 × 3
#> bill_depth_mm species_Chinstrap species_Gentoo
#> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 18.7 0 0
#> 2 17.4 0 0
#> 3 18 0 0
#> 4 19.3 0 0
#> 5 20.6 0 0
#> 6 17.8 0 0
#> 7 19.6 0 0
#> 8 17.6 0 0
#> 9 21.2 0 0
#> 10 21.1 0 0
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
penguin_recipe$outcomes
#> # A tibble: 333 × 1
#> bill_length_mm
#> <dbl>
#> 1 3.67
#> 2 3.68
#> 3 3.70
#> 4 3.60
#> 5 3.67
#> 6 3.66
#> 7 3.67
#> 8 3.72
#> 9 3.65
#> 10 3.54
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
The only special thing you can tweak with the recipe blueprint is whether or not an intercept is added.
recipe_with_intercept <- mold(
rec, penguins,
blueprint = default_recipe_blueprint(intercept = TRUE)
)
recipe_with_intercept$predictors
#> # A tibble: 333 × 4
#> `(Intercept)` bill_depth_mm species_Chinstrap species_Gentoo
#> <int> <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 1 18.7 0 0
#> 2 1 17.4 0 0
#> 3 1 18 0 0
#> 4 1 19.3 0 0
#> 5 1 20.6 0 0
#> 6 1 17.8 0 0
#> 7 1 19.6 0 0
#> 8 1 17.6 0 0
#> 9 1 21.2 0 0
#> 10 1 21.1 0 0
#> # ℹ 323 more rows
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They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
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