[R] Newbie data organisation/structures question...
    Marc Schwartz 
    marc_schwartz at comcast.net
       
    Wed Dec 20 18:50:56 CET 2006
    
    
  
On Wed, 2006-12-20 at 16:05 +0000, Gav Wood wrote:
> Howdo folks,
> 
> So my data is in this sort of format:
> 
> P  T  I
> 1  1  (1, 2, 3)
> 2  1  (2, 4)
> 1  2  (1, 3, 6, 7)
> 2  2  (6)
> 
> And I want to be able to quickly get:
> 
> 1: The I when both P and T are given. e.g.:
> P = 2, T = 2; I = (6)
> 
> 2: The concatenated vector of Is when P and a subset of T is given, e.g.:
> P = 1, T = 1:2;  Is = (1, 2, 3, 1, 3, 6, 7)
> 
> 3: The length of that vector.
> 
> It would also be nice to have:
> 
> 4: A list of Is when either P or T is given. e.g.:
> P = 2: I = (2, 4), (6)
> T = 1: I = (1, 2, 3), (1, 3, 6, 7)
> 
> Currently, I have a matrix of P x T, whose elements are lists of a 
> single item, the vector I. I call this 'm'.
> 
> (1) is easy; just m[P, T][[1]]
> (2) and (3) are apparently much harder. For 3, I'm resorting to:
> 
> total <- 0
> for(p in 1:length(m[,T]))
> 	total <- total + length(m[p,T][[1]]);
> 
> And something simiThis then giveslar for 2.
> 
> There must surely be a better way of doing this; but what is it?
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> Gav
Reading in your data using:
DF <- read.fwf("clipboard", widths = c(3, 3, 12),
               skip = 1)
colnames(DF) <- c("P", "T", "I")
Substitute your actual data file name for 'clipboard' above.
Note that I skip the header row, as the "T" causes problems, since it
wants to be converted to 'TRUE' (logical, not char) upon import,
screwing up the column widths. I then assign the colnames post import.
This then gives me:
> DF
  P T            I
1 1 1    (1, 2, 3)
2 2 1       (2, 4)
3 1 2 (1, 3, 6, 7)
4 2 2          (6)
Given the manipulations that you appear to want to do, I would first
strip the parens from "I" to make subsequent operations easier:
DF$I <- gsub("\\(|\\)", "", DF$I)
So:
> DF
  P T          I
1 1 1    1, 2, 3
2 2 1       2, 4
3 1 2 1, 3, 6, 7
4 2 2          6
Now, split the character vector based DF$I into components and convert
it to numeric lists:
> DF$I <- lapply(strsplit(DF$I, split = ","), as.numeric)
> DF
  P T          I
1 1 1    1, 2, 3
2 2 1       2, 4
3 1 2 1, 3, 6, 7
4 2 2          6
# Look at the structure of 'DF'
> str(DF)
'data.frame':	4 obs. of  3 variables:
 $ P: num  1 2 1 2
 $ T: num  1 1 2 2
 $ I:List of 4
  ..$ : num  1 2 3
  ..$ : num  2 4
  ..$ : num  1 3 6 7
  ..$ : num 6
Now for your manipulations above:
1: The I when both P and T are given. e.g.:
P = 2, T = 2; I = (6)
> subset(DF, (P == 2) & (T == 2), select = I)
  I
4 6
2: The concatenated vector of Is when P and a subset of T is given,
e.g.:
P = 1, T = 1:2;  Is = (1, 2, 3, 1, 3, 6, 7)
> unlist(subset(DF, (P == 1) & (T %in% 1:2), select = I))
I1 I2 I3 I4 I5 I6 I7 
 1  2  3  1  3  6  7
or you can use:
> as.vector(unlist(subset(DF, (P == 1) & (T %in% 1:2), select = I)))
[1] 1 2 3 1 3 6 7
which strips the name attributes from the vector.
3: The length of that vector.
> length(unlist(subset(DF, (P == 1) & (T %in% 1:2), select = I)))
[1] 7
4: A list of Is when either P or T is given. e.g.:
P = 2: I = (2, 4), (6)
T = 1: I = (1, 2, 3), (1, 3, 6, 7)
> subset(DF, P == 2, select = I)
     I
2 2, 4
4    6
> subset(DF, T == 1, select = I)
        I
1 1, 2, 3
2    2, 4
Note that your example above for 'T == 1' in 4 is incorrect based upon
your example data. "(1, 3, 6, 7)" is on the row where T == 2.   :-)
See ?read.fwf, ?read.table, ?subset, ?split, ?gsub, ?lapply, ?unlist, ?Syntax and ?Comparison for more information.
HTH,
Marc Schwartz
    
    
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