Hello Dr. Winsemius, Unfortunately, I also have terms like "krasmutated". So simply selecting words that start with "muta" won't work in this case.
Thanks, Paul --- On Mon, 4/23/12, David Winsemius <dwinsem...@comcast.net> wrote: > From: David Winsemius <dwinsem...@comcast.net> > Subject: Re: [R] Selecting columns whose names contain "mutated" except when > they also contain "non" or "un" > To: "Paul Miller" <pjmiller...@yahoo.com> > Cc: r-help@r-project.org > Received: Monday, April 23, 2012, 11:16 AM > > On Apr 23, 2012, at 12:10 PM, Paul Miller wrote: > > > Hello All, > > > > Started out awhile ago trying to select columns in a > dataframe whose names contain some variation of the word > "mutant" using code like: > > > > names(KRASyn)[grep("muta", names(KRASyn))] > > > > The idea then would be to add together the various > columns using code like: > > > > KRASyn$Mutant_comb <- rowSums(KRASyn[grep("muta", > names(KRASyn))]) > > > > What I discovered though, is that this selects columns > like "nonmutated" and "unmutated" as well as columns like > "mutated", "mutation", and "mutational". > > > > So I'd like to know how to select columns that have > some variation of the word "mutant" without the "non" or the > "un". I've been looking around for an example of how to do > that but haven't found anything yet. > > > > Can anyone show me how to select the columns I need? > > If you want only columns whose names _begin_ with "muta" > then add the "^" character at the beginning of your > pattern: > > names(KRASyn)[grep("^muta", names(KRASyn))] > > (This should be explained on the ?regex page.) > > -- > David Winsemius, MD > West Hartford, CT > > ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.