Lesser Known R Features

A collection of lesser known R tricks and features.

built in constants

R has a small number of built in numeric constants, including Inf and pi . But there are also a several useful lists of often used names and abbreviations including letters, month names, and various information about United States.

letters LETTERS month.name month.abb state.name state.abb state.region state.division state.area state.center

initiating a matrix

Below are several ways to create different 3x3 matrices.

matrix(0, 3, 3) mat.or.vec(3, 3) rbind(1:3, 1:3, 1:3) cbind(1:3, 1:3, 1:3) .row(c(3,3)) .col(c(3,3)) diag(3) 1:3 %o% 1:3

matrix element names

In addition to row names and column names each element of a matrix can have its own name too.

x <- matrix(1:9, ncol=3) names(x) <- paste0("e", 1:9)

And those names can be used to select the elements.

x["e3"] x[c("e2","e4")]

array index format

Indices from a matrix can be obtained in a <row, column> table form.

x <- matrix(1:6, nrow=2) which(x > 3, arr.ind=TRUE) ## row col ## [1,] 2 2 ## [2,] 1 3 ## [3,] 2 3

And this special format can also be used to select elements from a matrix.

x <- matrix(1:6, nrow=2) inds <- rbind(c(1,2), c(2,1)) x[inds]

elements in a nested list

The standard way to select elements from a nested list is to combine multiple subset operations.

a <- list(list(list(list("element")))) a[[1]][[1]][[1]][[1]]

However, a single vector of indices can be used instead.

a <- list(list(list(list("element")))) a[[c(1,1,1,1)]]

means of rows and columns

Taking sums and means of rows or columns of a matrix is an often repeated operation.

mat <- matrix(rnorm(200), nrow=10, ncol=20) colMeans(mat) rowMeans(mat) colSums(mat) rowSums(mat)

But R also has handy functions for repeating these operations on a flattened matrix, given that the dimensions are known.

vec <- as.numeric(mat) .colMeans(vec, m=10, n=20) .rowMeans(vec, m=10, n=20) .colSums(vec, m=10, n=20) .rowSums(vec, m=10, n=20)

matrix of lists

Matrix can contain various classes. Below is an example - matrix of data frames.

mat <- matrix(list(iris, mtcars, USArrests, chickwts), ncol=2)

To select the data frame from second row, second column:

mat[[2,2]]

split / unsplit

split() and unsplit() is a somewhat convenient way to do split-apply-combine tasks in base R. During this procedure the data frame is first split into a list of data frames - one for each group. Then a function is applied to all the data frames in a list. And finally the list is recombined again to a single data frame.

dfs <- split(iris, iris$Species) dfs <- lapply(dfs, transform, Sepal.Length=as.vector(scale(Sepal.Length))) dfs <- unsplit(dfs, iris$Species) ## Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length Petal.Width Species ## 1 0.26667447 3.5 1.4 0.2 setosa ## 2 -0.30071802 3.0 1.4 0.2 setosa ## 3 -0.86811050 3.2 1.3 0.2 setosa ## 4 -1.15180675 3.1 1.5 0.2 setosa ## 5 -0.01702177 3.6 1.4 0.2 setosa ## 6 1.11776320 3.9 1.7 0.4 setosa ## ...........................................................

However it is possible to do all of this with a single call to a split()<- function:

df <- iris split(df$Sepal.Length, df$Species) <- tapply(df$Sepal.Length, df$Species, scale) ## Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length Petal.Width Species ## 1 0.26667447 3.5 1.4 0.2 setosa ## 2 -0.30071802 3.0 1.4 0.2 setosa ## 3 -0.86811050 3.2 1.3 0.2 setosa ## 4 -1.15180675 3.1 1.5 0.2 setosa ## 5 -0.01702177 3.6 1.4 0.2 setosa ## 6 1.11776320 3.9 1.7 0.4 setosa ## ...........................................................

Or for all the columns in one go :

df <- iris split(df[,1:4], df$Species) <- Map(scale, split(df[,1:4], df$Species)) ## Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length Petal.Width Species ## 1 0.26667447 0.1899414 -0.3570112 -0.4364923 setosa ## 2 -0.30071802 -1.1290958 -0.3570112 -0.4364923 setosa ## 3 -0.86811050 -0.6014810 -0.9328358 -0.4364923 setosa ## 4 -1.15180675 -0.8652884 0.2188133 -0.4364923 setosa ## 5 -0.01702177 0.4537488 -0.3570112 -0.4364923 setosa ## 6 1.11776320 1.2451711 1.3704625 1.4613004 setosa ## ...........................................................

approximate pattern matching

grep() is an often used function to search for strings matching a specified pattern. But there also exists agrep() which allows approximate matching with mistakes.

grep("Nortx", state.name, value=TRUE) ## <no results> agrep("Nortx", state.name, value=TRUE) ## "North Carolina" "North Dakota"

repeating expressions

Taking an average of 10 random numbers 10 times can be done with a for loop.

res <- numeric(10) for(i in 1:10) { res[i] <- mean(rnorm(10)) }

And, perhaps more elegantly, with a sapply statement.

sapply(1:10, function(x) mean(rnorm(10)))

However R also has a dedicated function: replicate() , just for a task like this.

replicate(10, mean(rnorm(10)))

obtaining combinations

Starting with 5 letters, how many different 2-letter combinations can be obtained, if order does not matter and without repeats?

choose(5, 2)

It is also easy to get the actual combinations.

combn(letters[1:5], 2)

Or apply a function to each combination.

combn(letters[1:5], 2, FUN=function(x) paste(x, collapse="+"))

And if the order does matter and repeats are allowed:

expand.grid(letters[1:5], letters[1:5])

changing values to NA

Typical way to change all values of a vector matching a certain condition to “NA” is via substitution.

x <- 1:10 x[x>3] <- NA

But there is a rarely used alternative way.

x <- 1:10 is.na(x) <- x > 5

assigning operators

Possibility to create a custom infix operators by using the %...% syntax is well known. Here is an example of the operators opposite of %in% .

`%out%` <- function(x, y) !(x %in% y) LETTERS[LETTERS %out% c("A", "E", "I", "O", "U")]

It is also possible to create a custom assigning function, similar to names(x)<- . As an example here is a function that can replace the first element of a vector.

`first<-` <- function(x, value) c(value, x[-1]) x <- 1:10 first(x) <- 0

However, a more surprising construct is a combination of the two. Here is an example of a function that can replace all elements falling outside of specified set .

`%out%<-` <- function(x, y, value) {x[!(x %in% y)] <- value; x} x <- 1:10 x %out% c(4,5,6,7) <- 0

Maybe even more surprising is that this can be used on standard operators (those without %...% ). Below is a function that modifies the first argument of a product so that the product is equal to the given value.

`*<-` <- function(x, y, value) x*value/(x*y) x <- 5 y <- 2 x * y ## 10 x * y <- 1 x * y ## 1

And here is an even bigger contraption - assignment from both sides:

`<-<-` <- function(x, y, value) x <- paste0(y, "_", value) "start" -> x <- "end" x ## "start_end"

multiple linear regressions

A somewhat hidden feature of lm() is that it accepts Y in a matrix format and does regression for each column separately. Doing it this way is also a lot faster compared to executing lm() on each column individually. Below is an example of regressing each variable in iris dataset against Species . This results in estimating the coefficients of 4 separate linear models.

lm(data.matrix(iris[,-5]) ~ iris$Species) ## Call: ## lm(formula = data.matrix(iris[, -5]) ~ iris$Species) ## ## Coefficients: ## Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length Petal.Width ## (Intercept) -8.346e-17 2.555e-16 3.243e-16 2.853e-16 ## iris$Speciesversicolor 1.316e-16 -5.809e-16 1.191e-16 -7.439e-16 ## iris$Speciesvirginica -4.441e-17 -7.772e-16 1.998e-16 3.775e-16

color palette

R has over 650 named colors.

colors()

palette() allows to change the colors represented by numbers.

palette(c("cornflowerblue", "orange", "limegreen", "pink", "purple", "grey")) pie(table(chickwts$feed), col=1:6)

And to restore the colors:

palette("default") pie(table(chickwts$feed), col=1:6)

color interpolation

Sometimes it is necessary to color a numeric variable by its value. For this purpose colorRamp can create a function that will interpolate a given set of colors to the [0,1] interval. Then we can obtain a color corresponding to any number between 0 and 1 .

pal <- colorRamp(c("blue", "green", "orange", "red")) rgb(pal(0.5), max=255)

And here it is used to color the points by horse power:

# first - transform hp to a range 0-1 hp01 <- (mtcars$hp - min(mtcars$hp)) / diff(range(mtcars$hp)) plot(mtcars$hp, mtcars$mpg, pch=19, col=rgb(pal(hp01), max=255))

screens

Sometimes it is convenient to place a plot within a plot. One way to achieve this is with split.screen() :

figs <- rbind(c(0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 1.0), c(0.3, 0.5, 0.6, 0.8) ) screenIDs <- split.screen(figs) screen(screenIDs[1]) barplot(1:10, col="lightslategrey") screen(screenIDs[2]) par(mar=c(0,0,0,0)) pie(1:5)

hooks

Hooks are a mechanism for injecting a function after a certain action takes place. They are sparsely used within R. For the demonstration plot.new hook will be used here.

This hook allows user to insert an action at the end of the plot.new() function. Here it will be used for adding a date stamp to every created plot.

setHook("plot.new", function() {mtext(Sys.Date(), 3, adj=1, xpd=TRUE)}, "append")

Now all plots should have a date:

par(mfrow=c(1,2)) plot(density(iris$Sepal.Width), lwd=2, col="lightslategrey", main="density") pie(table(mtcars$gear))

the dollar operator

Dollar operator $ is used to select elements from a list by name. However it is a generic method and can be modified.

Here is a rewriting of $ operator to select rows, instead of columns, from data.frames :

`$.data.frame` <- function(x, name) {x[rownames(x)==name,]} USArrests$Utah ## Murder Assault UrbanPop Rape ## Utah 3.2 120 80 22.9

Auto-completion after pressing tab can also be added by rewriting the .DollarNames method:

.DollarNames.data.frame <- function(x, pattern="") { grep(pattern, rownames(x), value=TRUE) } > USArrests$A <tab> ...labama ...laska ...rizona ...rkansas

To add more weirdness tab autocompletion can be made to auto-correct row name mistakes: