Paulito Palmes
Paulito Palmes
yeah, in the same way you print large rows where you include the first few elements in the beginning ... and few at the end to give an idea of...
also, the omitted column names can be printed as long as they are not so many to swamp the display. this will help in making sure results with expected column...
can we cover this issue for both rows and columns. for example, i don’t want to see so many rows printed as the default. can i pass in the argument...
by the way, dataframe display is the nicest display among dataframe implementations and really help in analyzing tabular data. it is very elegant and clean.
> > also, the omitted column names can be printed as long as they are not so many to swamp the display. > > cropping to display width will ensure...

you will see in the bottom, it lists the column names cropped and also prints the first N rows. what i want as a variation is to crop the columns...
as i am not in my computer right now, i just linked the photo from this: http://www.sthda.com/english/wiki/tibble-data-format-in-r-best-and-modern-way-to-work-with-your-data which in a way captures partly the output i described.
maybe cache the last 3 rows/cols? if it’s an iterator, i thought they can be lazily loaded and cached? if it’s very slow, then at least the list of names...
https://github.com/IBM/Lale.jl/runs/2329281498?check_suite_focus=true