Name columns within aggregate in R

前端 未结 4 1792
逝去的感伤
逝去的感伤 2020-12-13 06:02

I know I can *re*name columns after I aggregate the data:

blubb <- aggregate(dat$two ~ dat$one, ...)
colnames(blubb) <- c(\"One\", \"Two\")
         


        
4条回答
  •  温柔的废话
    2020-12-13 06:20

    You can use setNames as in:

    blubb <- setNames(aggregate(dat$two ~ dat$one, ...), c("One", "Two"))
    

    Alternatively, you can bypass the slick formula method, and use syntax like:

    blubb <- aggregate(list(One = dat$one), list(Two = dat$two), ...)
    

    Update

    This update is to just help get you started on deriving a solution on your own.

    If you inspect the code for stats:::aggregate.formula, you'll see the following lines towards the end:

    if (is.matrix(mf[[1L]])) {
        lhs <- as.data.frame(mf[[1L]])
        names(lhs) <- as.character(m[[2L]][[2L]])[-1L]
        aggregate.data.frame(lhs, mf[-1L], FUN = FUN, ...)
    }
    else aggregate.data.frame(mf[1L], mf[-1L], FUN = FUN, ...)
    

    If all that you want to do is append the function name to the variable that was aggregated, perhaps you can change that to something like:

    if (is.matrix(mf[[1L]])) {
      lhs <- as.data.frame(mf[[1L]])
      names(lhs) <- as.character(m[[2L]][[2L]])[-1L]
      myOut <- aggregate.data.frame(lhs, mf[-1L], FUN = FUN, ...)
      colnames(myOut) <- c(names(mf[-1L]), 
                           paste(names(lhs), deparse(substitute(FUN)), sep = "."))
    }
    else {
      myOut <- aggregate.data.frame(mf[1L], mf[-1L], FUN = FUN, ...)
      colnames(myOut) <- c(names(mf[-1L]), 
                           paste(strsplit(gsub("cbind\\(|\\)|\\s", "", 
                                               names(mf[1L])), ",")[[1]],
                                 deparse(substitute(FUN)), sep = "."))
    } 
    myOut
    

    This basically captures the value entered for FUN by using deparse(substitute(FUN)), so you can probably modify the function to accept a custom suffix, or perhaps even a vector of suffixes. This can probably be improved a bit with some work, but I'm not going to do it!

    Here is a Gist with this concept applied, creating a function named "myAgg".

    Here is some sample output of just the resulting column names:

    > names(myAgg(weight ~ feed, data = chickwts, mean))
    [1] "feed"        "weight.mean"
    > names(myAgg(breaks ~ wool + tension, data = warpbreaks, sum))
    [1] "wool"       "tension"    "breaks.sum"
    > names(myAgg(weight ~ feed, data = chickwts, FUN = function(x) mean(x^2)))
    [1] "feed"                         "weight.function(x) mean(x^2)"
    

    Notice that only the aggregated variable name changes. But notice also that if you use a custom function, you'll end up with a really strange column name!

提交回复
热议问题