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Easily connect to Statistics Canada’s Web Data Service with R. Open economic data (formerly known as CANSIM tables, now identified by Product IDs (PID)) are accessible as a data frame, directly in the user’s R environment.
For people less comfortable with R and to allow more people to have access to our package, we have also developed a Shiny application.Through the same logic present in our package, researchers can retrieve data from Statistics Canada.
statcanR EploR is available [here]
The released version of statcanR package is accessible through CRAN and devtools.
install.packages("statcanR")
install.packages("devtools")
::install_github('warint/statcanR') devtools
This section presents an example of how to use the
statcanR
R package and its function
statcan_data()
and
statcan_download_data()
.
The following example is provided to illustrate how to use the functions. It consists in collecting some descriptive statistics about the Canadian Labour Force at the federal, provincial and industrial levels, on a monthly basis.
With a simple web search ‘statistics canada wages by industry metropolitan area monthly’, the table number can easily be found on Statisitcs Canada’s webpage. Here is below a figure that illustrates this example, such as ‘27-10-0014-01’ for the Federal expenditures on science and technology, by socio-economic objectives.
Once the table number is identified, the statcan_data() function is easy to use in order to collect the data, as following:
library(statcanR)
<- statcan_data("27-10-0014-01","eng") mydata
For the statcan_download_data()
function there is no
difference on how to use it, the only difference is that this function
allow you to download the data in a csv file on top of having the data
in your environment.
library(statcanR)
<- statcan_download_data("27-10-0014-01","eng") mydata
Tutorial made by Professor Charles Saunders, Director of Master of Financial Economics Program at Western University biography
Thanks!
https://www.youtube.com/embed/z9TDUlgT5lc
This licence is issued on behalf of Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, as represented by the Minister for Statistics Canada (“Statistics Canada”) to you (an individual or a legal entity that you are authorized to represent).
Statistics Canada may modify this licence at any time, and such modifications shall be effective immediately upon posting of the modified licence on the Statistics Canada website. Your use of the Information will be governed by the terms of the licence in force as of the date and time you accessed the Information.
Please refer to the terms of licence before using the Information.
Statistics Canada has a specific procedure regarding the ackowledgment of source :
You shall include and maintain the following notice on all licensed rights of the Information:
Source: Statistics Canada, name of product, reference date. Reproduced and distributed on an "as is" basis with the permission of Statistics Canada.
Where any Information is contained within a Value-added Product, you shall include on such Value-added Product the following notice:
Adapted from Statistics Canada, name of product, reference date. This does not constitute an endorsement by Statistics Canada of this product.
To cite stantcanR package in your work:
Warin, T., Romain Le Duc (2019). statcanR: Client for Statistics Canada’s Open Economic Data. v0.1.0.
@Manual{R-statcanR,
= {statcanR: Client for Statistics Canada's Open Economic Data},
title author = {Thierry Warin and Romain {Le Duc}},
note = {R package version 0.1.0},
url = {https://github.com/warint/statcanR},
year = {2019},
doi = "10.6084/m9.figshare.10544735.v1"
}
The authors would like to thank the Center for Interuniversity Research and Analysis of Organizations (CIRANO, Montreal) for its support, as well as Thibault Senegas, Marine Leroi and Martin Paquette. However, errors and omissions are ours.
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
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