On Dec 5, 2010, at 9:57 AM, ram basnet wrote:
Dear R users,
It may be very simple but it is being difficult for me.
I have two vectors with some common string. And, i want to combine
into a vector in such a way that it includes string from both
vectors and make a unique.
For example:
x
unique(c(x,y))
On Sun, Dec 5, 2010 at 8:27 PM, ram basnet wrote:
> Dear R users,
>
> It may be very simple but it is being difficult for me.
> I have two vectors with some common string. And, i want to combine into a
> vector in such a way that it includes string from both vectors and make a
>
On 05/12/2010 9:57 AM, ram basnet wrote:
Dear R users,
It may be very simple but it is being difficult for me.
I have two vectors with some common string. And, i want to combine into a
vector in such a way that it includes string from both vectors and make a
unique.
For example:
x<- paste(re
Dear R users,
It may be very simple but it is being difficult for me.
I have two vectors with some common string. And, i want to combine into a
vector in such a way that it includes string from both vectors and make a
unique.
For example:
x <- paste(rep("A",5),1:5,sep = ".")
x
[1] "A.1" "A
On May 14, 2010, at 7:22 AM, Knut Krueger wrote:
> Hi to all,
>
> is there a better way instead for loop to merge two vectors:
>
> V1 <- c(1,3,5,7,9)
> V2<- c(20,40,60,80,100)
> to
> V_merged <- c(1,20,3,40,5,60,7,80,9,100)
>
> Kind regards
> Knut
Try this:
> as.vector(rbind(V1, V2))
[1]
Hi to all,
is there a better way instead for loop to merge two vectors:
V1 <- c(1,3,5,7,9)
V2<- c(20,40,60,80,100)
to
V_merged <- c(1,20,3,40,5,60,7,80,9,100)
Kind regards
Knut
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