MyNixOS website logo
Description

Create Unique Pseudonymous Animal Names.

Generate pseudonymous animal names that are delightful and easy to remember like the Likable Leech and the Proud Chickadee. A unique pseudonym can be created for every unique element in a vector or row in a data frame. Pseudonyms can be customized and tracked over time, so that the same input is always assigned the same pseudonym.

noah

Lifecycle:maturing CRANstatus R buildstatus Codecov testcoverage

noah (no animals were harmed) generates pseudonyms that are delightful and easy to remember. It creates adorable anonymous animals like the Likable Leech and the Proud Chickadee.

Installation

Noah is not yet on CRAN, but you can install it from Github with:

# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("teebusch/noah")

Usage

Generate pseudonyms

Use pseudonymize() to generate a unique pseudonym for every unique element / row in a vector or data frame. pseudonymize() accepts multiple vectors and data frames as arguments, and will pseudonymize them row by row.

library(noah)

pseudonymize(1:9)
#> [1] "Impartial Rat"       "Superficial Bird"    "Royal Orca"         
#> [4] "Earsplitting Python" "Fascinated Donkey"   "Defeated Trout"     
#> [7] "Encouraging Stoat"   "Null Grouse"         "Axiomatic Octopus"

pseudonymize(
  c("🐰", "🐰", "🐰"), 
  c("🥕", "🥕", "🍰")
)
#> [1] "Bloody Clam"     "Bloody Clam"     "Depressed Egret"

For extra delight, we can ask noah to generate only alliterations:

pseudonymize(1:9, .alliterate = TRUE)
#> [1] "Safe Sole"             "Callous Clownfish"     "Polite Panda"         
#> [4] "Best Badger"           "Like Leopard"          "Many Mole"            
#> [7] "Smiling Slug"          "Sweltering Silverfish" "Sick Sloth"

Add pseudonyms to a data frame

You can use pseudonymize() with dplyr::mutate() to add a column with pseudonyms to a data frame. In this example we use the diabetic retinopathy dataset from the package survival and add a new column with a pseudonym for each unique id. We also use dplyr::relocate() to move the pseudonyms to the first column:

library(dplyr)
diabetic <- as_tibble(survival::diabetic)

diabetic %>% 
  mutate(pseudonym = pseudonymize(id)) %>% 
  relocate(pseudonym)
#> # A tibble: 394 x 9
#>    pseudonym               id laser   age eye     trt  risk  time status
#>    <chr>                <int> <fct> <int> <fct> <int> <int> <dbl>  <int>
#>  1 Possessive Armadillo     5 argon    28 left      0     9  46.2      0
#>  2 Possessive Armadillo     5 argon    28 right     1     9  46.2      0
#>  3 Crowded Vole            14 xenon    12 left      1     8  42.5      0
#>  4 Crowded Vole            14 xenon    12 right     0     6  31.3      1
#>  5 Productive Heron        16 xenon     9 left      1    11  42.3      0
#>  6 Productive Heron        16 xenon     9 right     0    11  42.3      0
#>  7 Frequent Okapi          25 xenon     9 left      0    11  20.6      0
#>  8 Frequent Okapi          25 xenon     9 right     1    11  20.6      0
#>  9 Giant Lobster           29 xenon    13 left      0    10   0.3      1
#> 10 Giant Lobster           29 xenon    13 right     1     9  38.8      0
#> # ... with 384 more rows

For your convenience, noah also provides add_pseudonyms(), which wraps mutate() and relocate() and supports tidyselect syntax for selecting the key columns:

diabetic %>% 
  add_pseudonyms(id, where(is.factor))
#> # A tibble: 394 x 9
#>    pseudonym                id laser   age eye     trt  risk  time status
#>    <chr>                 <int> <fct> <int> <fct> <int> <int> <dbl>  <int>
#>  1 Doubtful Horse            5 argon    28 left      0     9  46.2      0
#>  2 Caring Heron              5 argon    28 right     1     9  46.2      0
#>  3 Grey Chicken             14 xenon    12 left      1     8  42.5      0
#>  4 Giddy Vole               14 xenon    12 right     0     6  31.3      1
#>  5 Overrated Caterpillar    16 xenon     9 left      1    11  42.3      0
#>  6 Angry Oribi              16 xenon     9 right     0    11  42.3      0
#>  7 Roasted Sawfish          25 xenon     9 left      0    11  20.6      0
#>  8 Spectacular Lion         25 xenon     9 right     1    11  20.6      0
#>  9 Panoramic Owl            29 xenon    13 left      0    10   0.3      1
#> 10 Orange Bear              29 xenon    13 right     1     9  38.8      0
#> # ... with 384 more rows

Keeping track of pseudonyms with an Ark

To make sure that all pseudonyms are unique and consistent, pseudonymize() and add_pseudonyms() use an object of class Ark (a pseudonym archive). By default, a new Ark is created for each function call, but you can also provide an Ark yourself. This allows you to keep track of the pseudonyms that have been used and make sure that the same keys always get assigned the same pseudonym:

ark <- Ark$new()

# split dataset into left and right eye and pseudonymize separately
diabetic_left <- diabetic %>% 
  filter(eye == "left") %>% 
  add_pseudonyms(id, .ark = ark)

diabetic_right <- diabetic %>% 
  filter(eye == "right") %>% 
  add_pseudonyms(id, .ark = ark)

# reunite the data sets again
bind_rows(diabetic_left, diabetic_right) %>% 
  arrange(id)
#> # A tibble: 394 x 9
#>    pseudonym          id laser   age eye     trt  risk  time status
#>    <chr>           <int> <fct> <int> <fct> <int> <int> <dbl>  <int>
#>  1 Faulty Swift        5 argon    28 left      0     9  46.2      0
#>  2 Faulty Swift        5 argon    28 right     1     9  46.2      0
#>  3 Tart Crab          14 xenon    12 left      1     8  42.5      0
#>  4 Tart Crab          14 xenon    12 right     0     6  31.3      1
#>  5 Sticky Barnacle    16 xenon     9 left      1    11  42.3      0
#>  6 Sticky Barnacle    16 xenon     9 right     0    11  42.3      0
#>  7 Brainy Moth        25 xenon     9 left      0    11  20.6      0
#>  8 Brainy Moth        25 xenon     9 right     1    11  20.6      0
#>  9 Poised Urial       29 xenon    13 left      0    10   0.3      1
#> 10 Poised Urial       29 xenon    13 right     1     9  38.8      0
#> # ... with 384 more rows

The ark now contains 197 pseudonyms – as many as there are unique id’s in the dataset.

length(unique(diabetic$id))
#> [1] 197
length(ark)
#> [1] 197

Customizing an Ark

Building your own Ark allows you to customize the name parts that are used to create pseudonyms (by default, adjectives and animals). It also allow you to use names with more than two parts:

ark <- Ark$new(parts = list(
  c("Charles", "Louis", "Henry", "George"),
  c("I", "II", "III", "IV"),
  c("The Good", "The Wise", "The Brave", "The Mad", "The Beloved")
))

pseudonymize(1:8, .ark = ark)
#> [1] "Louis IV The Brave"   "George II The Good"   "Louis I The Good"    
#> [4] "Charles IV The Wise"  "Charles IV The Brave" "Louis II The Mad"    
#> [7] "Charles I The Brave"  "George I The Beloved"

You can also configure an Ark so that it generates only alliterations. Note that this behavior can still be overridden temporarily by using .alliterate = FALSE when you call pseudonymize().

ark <- Ark$new(alliterate = TRUE)

pseudonymize(1:12, .ark = ark)
#>  [1] "Hard-To-Find Hyena" "Well-Made Whippet"  "Momentous Mosquito"
#>  [4] "Mushy Macaw"        "Complete Clownfish" "Three Tahr"        
#>  [7] "Phobic Pheasant"    "Squealing Swallow"  "Subdued Swan"      
#> [10] "Mundane Marsupial"  "Complex Centipede"  "Cruel Crane"

Gotchas

Noah will treat numerically identical whole numbers of type double and integer as different and give them different pseudonyms. This can cause some unexpected behavior. Consider this example:

ark <- Ark$new()

pseudonymize(1:2, .ark = ark)  # creates a vector of integers c(1L, 2L)
pseudonymize(1, .ark = ark)    # creates a double

You might expect to get 2 different pseudonyms, because in the second pseudonymize() you are requesting a pseudonym for the number 1, which is already in the Ark. Instead you get three pseudonyms:

length(ark)
#> [1] 3

Noah will warn you when it thinks you are making this mistake, but it might not catch it all the time. A workaround is to coerce types explicitly, for example by using as.double(), as.integer(), or 1L to create integers.

Related R packages

There are multiple R packages that generate fake data, including fake names, phone numbers, addresses, credit card numbers, gene sequences and more:

If you need watertight anonymization you should check out these packages for anonymizing personal identifiable information in data sets:

Metadata

Version

0.1.0

License

Unknown

Platforms (75)

    Darwin
    FreeBSD
    Genode
    GHCJS
    Linux
    MMIXware
    NetBSD
    none
    OpenBSD
    Redox
    Solaris
    WASI
    Windows
Show all
  • aarch64-darwin
  • aarch64-genode
  • aarch64-linux
  • aarch64-netbsd
  • aarch64-none
  • aarch64_be-none
  • arm-none
  • armv5tel-linux
  • armv6l-linux
  • armv6l-netbsd
  • armv6l-none
  • armv7a-darwin
  • armv7a-linux
  • armv7a-netbsd
  • armv7l-linux
  • armv7l-netbsd
  • avr-none
  • i686-cygwin
  • i686-darwin
  • i686-freebsd
  • i686-genode
  • i686-linux
  • i686-netbsd
  • i686-none
  • i686-openbsd
  • i686-windows
  • javascript-ghcjs
  • loongarch64-linux
  • m68k-linux
  • m68k-netbsd
  • m68k-none
  • microblaze-linux
  • microblaze-none
  • microblazeel-linux
  • microblazeel-none
  • mips-linux
  • mips-none
  • mips64-linux
  • mips64-none
  • mips64el-linux
  • mipsel-linux
  • mipsel-netbsd
  • mmix-mmixware
  • msp430-none
  • or1k-none
  • powerpc-netbsd
  • powerpc-none
  • powerpc64-linux
  • powerpc64le-linux
  • powerpcle-none
  • riscv32-linux
  • riscv32-netbsd
  • riscv32-none
  • riscv64-linux
  • riscv64-netbsd
  • riscv64-none
  • rx-none
  • s390-linux
  • s390-none
  • s390x-linux
  • s390x-none
  • vc4-none
  • wasm32-wasi
  • wasm64-wasi
  • x86_64-cygwin
  • x86_64-darwin
  • x86_64-freebsd
  • x86_64-genode
  • x86_64-linux
  • x86_64-netbsd
  • x86_64-none
  • x86_64-openbsd
  • x86_64-redox
  • x86_64-solaris
  • x86_64-windows