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. 2020 Jul 28;18(7):e3000763. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000763

Fig 1. Code-sharing is at its infancy in ecology, whereas data-sharing seems more common.

Fig 1

Percentage of articles reviewed that provided code (a) or data (b) for each of the time periods studied (2015–2016: 172 articles, 2018–2019: 174 articles). For studies that provided code (2015–2016: 40 articles, 2018–2019: 52 articles), the percentage of articles reviewed that hosted code in repositories (including nonpermanent platforms such GitHub; 2015–2016: 3 articles, 2018–2019: 8 articles), web pages, or supplements is shown (c). All percentages calculated in this manuscript and a description of how they were calculated are available in S2 Table in https://asanchez-tojar.github.io/code_in_ecology/supporting_information.html. Data to reproduce this figure are available at Culina and colleagues [19]: script “004_plotting.R”.