It is because you don't know whether you want it or not.
It is a bit more obvious with integer indexing, as in color[race]: if race is
NA you don't know what color to put in, but the result should be the same
length as race.
With logical indices, the behaviour is a bit annoying, but ultimatel
c(1:3)[c(1,NA,3)]
[1] 1 NA 3
On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 6:06 PM Elham Daadmehr wrote:
> Thanks guys. but I'm a bit confused. the input is the first column (z[,1]
> and z1[,1]).
> How is it possible that a subset of a non-NA vector, contains NA?
>
> On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 4:58 PM Eric Berger wrot
Good point! :-)
On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 5:55 PM peter dalgaard wrote:
> Offhand, I suspect that the NAs are in the 8th column.
>
> > On 26 Aug 2020, at 10:57 , Elham Daadmehr wrote:
> >
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I have a simple problem. I get stuck in using the imported spss data
> (.sav)
> > using
Offhand, I suspect that the NAs are in the 8th column.
> On 26 Aug 2020, at 10:57 , Elham Daadmehr wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> I have a simple problem. I get stuck in using the imported spss data (.sav)
> using "read.spss".
> I imported data (z) without any problem. After importing, the first column
Hi
As OP has only about 250 files and in read_excel you cannot specify several
ranges at once, reading those values separately and concatenating them
together in one step seems to be the most efficient way. One probably could
design such function, but time spent on the function performing the task
Hi Elham,
You are not giving us much to go on here.
Show us the commands that (a) confirm there are no NA's in the first column
of z
and (b) output a row of z that has an NA in the first column.
Here's how one might do this:
(a) sum(is.na(z[,1]))
(b) z[ match(TRUE, z[,8] %in% c("11","12","14")), ]
Hi all,
I have a simple problem. I get stuck in using the imported spss data (.sav)
using "read.spss".
I imported data (z) without any problem. After importing, the first column
doesn't contain any "NA". but when I choose a subset of it (like:
z[z[,8]=="11"|z[,8]=="12"|z[,8]=="14",]), lots of NA a
>From your example, it appears you are reading in the same excel file for
each function to get a value. I would look at creating a function that
extracts what you need from each file all at once, rather than separate
reads.
Stephen C. Upton
SEED (Simulation Experiments & Efficient Designs) Center
Hello,
Inline.
Às 09:00 de 26/08/20, PIKAL Petr escreveu:
Hi
IS is data frame so it is not numeric.
try str(IS) to see structure of your data.
maybe just
mat.IS <- as.matrix(IS)
gives you desired result, but it depends on (undisclosed) IS structure
BTW, do not use html formatting, it is us
Hi Eric,
There are a few mysteries in your request. As we don't know what "des"
is, it is difficult to see why it does not have the correct number of
dimensions. It looks like it should be an n x 6 matrix, but is that
what it really is and does the mlogit function expect such a matrix?
JIm
On Wed
Hi Luis,
I had a quick look at the "diagram" package, which seems to accept
transition matrices. I don't have it installed, but the help pages are
fairly easy to follow and may do the job for you.
Jim
On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 5:50 PM Luis Fernando García
wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> I am wanting to
Thank you very much. I appreciate your help!
Deborah D. Lee, PhD
Associate Director of Student Affairs Research and Assessment
The Pennsylvania State University
105 White Building
University Park, PA 16802
(814) 863-9609
-Original Message-
From: PIKAL Petr
Sent: Wednesday, August 26,
Hi
Are you sure that your command read values from respective cells?
I tried it and got empty data frame with names
> WO <- lapply(files, read_excel, sheet=1, range=("B3"))
> as.data.frame(WO)
[1] ano TP303 X96
[4] X0 X3.751999
Hi
IS is data frame so it is not numeric.
try str(IS) to see structure of your data.
maybe just
mat.IS <- as.matrix(IS)
gives you desired result, but it depends on (undisclosed) IS structure
BTW, do not use html formatting, it is useless in this list
BTW2, you should spend at least few minute
Hi
Please, I get this error message “Error in data[theorder, ] : incorrect
number of dimensions” when I run the mlogit model presented below.
Best regards,
Eric
library(mlogit)
library(idefix)
idefix.data *<- *aggregate_design
idefix.data
des *<- *as.matrix(idefix.data[, 3*:*8], nco
Thanks Jim,
I do not know what happened, I will try the question again.
Best
El lun., 24 ago. 2020 a las 5:47, Jim Lemon ()
escribió:
> Hi Luis,
> As so often happens, the image didn't make it. Try PNG or PDF format.
> Without seeing what you want, it's only guessing.
>
> Jim
>
> On Mon, Aug 24
Dear all,
I am wanting to make a flow diagram like the one attached as an example
for the given dataset (
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1CdtcJ5g6bp6jEoY7P6dKxO1mZWLEFZX7/view?usp=sharing
).
The idea is to plot a flow diagram using the probabilities given by a
transition matrix like the display
Dear all,
I am trying to write an interface function (CBI function) in order to use the
bootstrapping function clusterboot() together with the clustering algorithm
kmodes(). See here:
https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/fpc/versions/2.2-7/topics/clusterboot
kmodes function | R Documentation
I am trying to using the "paran" package in R for Horn's parallel analysis.
According to the "paran" manual, the highlighted yellow ought to be a numerical
matrix or data frame. It looks like this should be the file name. Is there
something that I need to do
install.packages("paran")
library(pa
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