If you’re into statistics and data science, you’ve probably heard of the R programming language. It’s a statistical programming language that has gained much popularity lately. It comes with an environment specifically designed to be good at exploring data, plotting visualizations, and fitting models.

R is not like most programming languages. It’s quite different from any other language I’ve worked with: it’s developed by statisticians, who think differently from programmers. In this blog post, I describe some of the pitfalls that I ran into learning R with a computer science background. I used R extensively in two stats courses in university, and afterwards for a bunch of data analysis projects, and now I’m just starting to be comfortable and efficient with it.

Why a statistical programming language?

When I encountered R for the first time, my first reaction was: “why do we need a new language to do stats? Can’t we just use Python and import some statistical libraries?”

Sure, you can, but R is very streamlined for it. In Python, you would need something like scipy for fitting models, and something like matplotlib to display things on screen. With R, you get RStudio, a complete environment, and it’s very much batteries-included. In RStudio, you can parse the data, run statistics on it, and visualize results with very few lines of code.

Aside: RStudio is an IDE for R. Although it’s possible to run R standalone from the command line, in practice almost everyone uses RStudio.

I’ll do a quick demo of fitting a linear regression on a dataset to demonstrate how easy it is to do in R. First, let’s load the CSV file:

df <- read.csv("fossum.csv")

This reads a dataset containing body length measurements for a bunch of possums. Don’t ask why, it was used in a stats course I took. R parses the CSV file into a data frame and automatically figures out the dimensions and variable names and types.

Next, we fit a linear regression model of the total length of the possum versus the head length:

model <- lm(totlngth ~ hdlngth, df)

It’s one line of code with the lm function. What’s more, fitting linear models is so common in R that the syntax is baked into the language.

Aside: Here, we did totlngth ~ hdlngth to perform a single variable linear regression, but the notation allows fancier stuff. For example, if we did lm(totlngth ~ (hdlngth + age)^2) , then we would get a model including two variables and the second order interaction effects. This is called Wilkinson-Rogers notation, if you want to read more about it.

We want to know how the model is doing, so we run the summary command:

> summary(model) Call: lm(formula = totlngth ~ hdlngth, data = df) Residuals: Min 1Q Median 3Q Max -7.275 -1.611 0.136 1.882 5.250 Coefficients: Estimate Std. Error t value Pr(>|t|) (Intercept) -28.722 14.655 -1.960 0.0568 . hdlngth 1.266 0.159 7.961 7.5e-10 *** --- Signif. codes: 0 ‘***’ 0.001 ‘**’ 0.01 ‘*’ 0.05 ‘.’ 0.1 ‘ ’ 1 Residual standard error: 2.653 on 41 degrees of freedom Multiple R-squared: 0.6072, Adjusted R-squared: 0.5976 F-statistic: 63.38 on 1 and 41 DF, p-value: 7.501e-10

Don’t worry if this doesn’t mean anything to you, it’s just dumping the parameters of the models it fit, and ran a bunch of tests to determine how significant the model is.

Lastly, let’s visualize the regression with a scatterplot:

plot(df$hdlngth, df$totlngth) abline(model)

And R gives us a nice plot:

All of this only took 4 lines of R code! Hopefully I’ve piqued your interest by now — R is great for quickly trying out a lot of different models on your data without too much effort.

That being said, R has a somewhat steep learning curve as a lot of things don’t work the way you’d expect. Next, I’ll mention some pitfalls I came across.

Don’t worry about the type system

As computer scientists, we’re used to thinking about type systems, type casting rules, variable scoping rules, closures, stuff like that. These details form the backbone of any programming language, or so I thought. Not the case with R.

R is designed by statisticians, and statisticians are more interested in doing statistics than worrying about intricacies of their programming language. Types do exist, but it’s not worth your time to worry about the difference between a list and a vector; most likely, your code will just work on both.

The most fundamental object in R is the data frame, which stores rows of data. Data frames are as ubiquitous in R as objects are in Java. They also don’t have a close equivalent in most programming languages; it’s similar to a SQL table or an Excel spreadsheet.

Use dplyr for data wrangling

The base library in R is not the most well-designed package in the world. There are many inconsistencies, arbitrary design decisions, and common operations are needlessly unintuitive. Fortunately, R has an excellent ecosystem of packages that make up for the shortcomings of the base system.

In particular, I highly recommend using the packages dplyr and tidyr instead of the base package for data wrangling tasks. I’m talking about operations you do to data to get it to be a certain form, like sorting by a variable, grouping by a set of variables and computing the aggregate sum over each group, etc. Dplyr and tidyr provide a consistent set of functions that make this easy. I won’t go into too much detail, but you can see this page for a comparison between dplyr and base R for some common data wrangling tasks.

Use ggplot2 for plotting

Plotting is another domain where the base package falls short. The functions are inconsistent and worse, you’re often forced to hardcode arbitrary constants in your code. Stupid things like plot(..., pch=19) where 19 is the constant for “solid circle” and 17 means “solid triangle”.

There’s no reason to learn the base plotting system — ggplot2 is a much better alternative. Its functions allow you to build graphs piece by piece in a consistent manner (and they look nicer by default). I won’t go into the comparison in detail, but here’s a blog post that describes the advantages of ggplot2 over base graphics.

It’s unfortunate that R’s base package falls short in these two areas. But with the package manager, it’s super easy to install better alternatives. Both ggplot2 and dplyr are widely used (currently, both are in the top 5 most downloaded R packages).

How to self-study R

First off, check out Swirl. It’s a package for teaching beginners the basics of R, interactively within RStudio itself. It guides you through its courses on topics like regression modelling and dplyr, and only takes a few hours to complete.

At some point, read through the tidyverse style guide to get up to speed on the best practices on naming files and variables and stuff like that.

Now go and analyze data! One major difference between R and other languages is that you need a dataset to do anything interesting. There are many public datasets out there; Kaggle provides a sizable repository.

For me, it’s a lot more motivating to analyze data I care about. Analyze your bank statement history, or data on your phone’s pedometer app, or your university’s enrollment statistics data to find which electives have the most girls. Turn it into a mini data-analysis project. Fit some regression models and draw a few graphs with R, this is a great way to learn.

The best thing about R is the number of packages out there. If you read about a statistical model, chances are that someone’s written an R package for it. You can download it and be up and running in minutes.

It takes a while to get used to, but learning R is definitely a worthwhile investment for any aspiring data scientist.