问题
When I pass a row of a data frame to a function using apply, I lose the class information of the elements of that row. They all turn into 'character'. The following is a simple example. I want to add a couple of years to the 3 stooges ages. When I try to add 2 a value that had been numeric R says "non-numeric argument to binary operator." How do I avoid this?
age = c(20, 30, 50)
who = c("Larry", "Curly", "Mo")
df = data.frame(who, age)
colnames(df) <- c( '_who_', '_age_')
dfunc <- function (er) {
print(er['_age_'])
print(er[2])
print(is.numeric(er[2]))
print(class(er[2]))
return (er[2] + 2)
}
a <- apply(df,1, dfunc)
Output follows:
_age_
"20"
_age_
"20"
[1] FALSE
[1] "character"
Error in er[2] + 2 : non-numeric argument to binary operator
回答1:
apply
only really works on matrices (which have the same type for all elements). When you run it on a data.frame
, it simply calls as.matrix
first.
The easiest way around this is to work on the numeric columns only:
# skips the first column
a <- apply(df[, -1, drop=FALSE],1, dfunc)
# Or in two steps:
m <- as.matrix(df[, -1, drop=FALSE])
a <- apply(m,1, dfunc)
The drop=FALSE
is needed to avoid getting a single column vector.
-1
means all-but-the first column, you could instead explicitly specify the columns you want, for example df[, c('foo', 'bar')]
UPDATE
If you want your function to access one full data.frame row at a time, there are (at least) two options:
# "loop" over the index and extract a row at a time
sapply(seq_len(nrow(df)), function(i) dfunc(df[i,]))
# Use split to produce a list where each element is a row
sapply(split(df, seq_len(nrow(df))), dfunc)
The first option is probably better for large data frames since it doesn't have to create a huge list structure upfront.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10037745/losing-class-information-when-i-use-apply-in-r