Skip to content

🚉🎫 R package: wrangle Oyster-card data supplied by Transport for London

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

matt-dray/oystr

Repository files navigation

oystr

Project Status: WIP – Initial development is in progress, but there has not yet been a stable, usable release suitable for the public. Travis build status Coverage status CodeFactor CRAN status Blog post

Purpose

Handle TfL Oyster journey history data. Under development.

You can use an Oyster card to pay for public transit on Transport for London (TfL) services. You can opt-in to monthly emails with your journey history attached as a CSV. Functions in this package help to read, handle and summarise these data.

I, and this package, are not associated officially with TfL.

Install

The package is under development with no guarantees whatsoever.

Install with remotes::install_github("matt-dray/oystr").

Functions

Functions under development:

  • oy_read() reads and checks multiple raw journey history files from a folder
  • oy_clean() cleans journey history data and engineers new variables
  • oy_lineplot() to plot features over time (restricted to train journeys for now)
  • oy_summary() for summarising main statistics (restricted to train and bus journeys only)
  • oy_cols() contains the TfL colour palette

There's also anonymised journey history data:

  • journeys_read is an example of anonymised data read with oy_read()
  • journeys_clean is the result of using oy_clean() on the journeys_read data

Dependencies

Developing this package is an exercise in working with minimal dependencies (hopefully zero) and working with good ol' base R functions.

Limitations

The format of journey history data from TfL have remained pretty consistent for a number of years and there's no reason to believe that this will change anytime soon. It could though. In which case, these functions may fail.

Also, I asked TfL for details of all the possible forms of their column 'Journey/Action', which includes things like station start and end, bus route and much more. They were unable to provide this information. Therefore, the oy_clean() function can only parse formats that I'm personally aware of (train and bus, mostly) given my own Oyster history data. For example, I know the exact string for bus journeys is "Bus journey, route ". I don't know what format this string takes if you travel on a boat, for example.

I would be extremely pleased if someone could share this information.

Contributing

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

About

🚉🎫 R package: wrangle Oyster-card data supplied by Transport for London

Topics

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Languages