I’ve changed the default printing rule to show all columns. As some point, we’ll need to clean it up so that we don’t print crazy amounts of ouptut if you have thousands of columns or more.
— John On Jun 9, 2014, at 4:42 PM, cnbiz850 <[email protected]> wrote: > I only got the following formatted display but not my values. To me this is > really not desired, does everyone prefer this? > > Can I get a printout of the values just as I print out a row of an array? > > julia> println(df[jj, 1:20]) > 1x20 DataFrame > |-------|------|--------|---------| > | Col # | Name | Eltype | Missing | > | 1 | x1 | Int64 | 0 | > | 2 | x2 | Int64 | 0 | > | 3 | x3 | Int64 | 0 | > | 4 | x4 | Int64 | 0 | > | 5 | x5 | Int64 | 0 | > | 6 | x6 | Int64 | 0 | > | 7 | x7 | Int64 | 0 | > | 8 | x8 | Int64 | 0 | > | 9 | x9 | Int64 | 0 | > | 10 | x10 | Int64 | 0 | > | 11 | x11 | Int64 | 0 | > | 12 | x12 | Int64 | 0 | > | 13 | x13 | Int64 | 0 | > | 14 | x14 | Int64 | 0 | > | 15 | x15 | Int64 | 0 | > | 16 | x16 | Int64 | 0 | > | 17 | x17 | Int64 | 0 | > | 18 | x18 | Int64 | 0 | > | 19 | x19 | Int64 | 0 | > | 20 | x20 | Int64 | 0 | >
