Reference
Last updated on 2024-03-12 | Edit this page
Reference
Introduction to R and RStudio
- Use the escape key to cancel incomplete commands or running code (Ctrl+C) if you’re using R from the shell.
- Basic arithmetic operations follow standard order of precedence:
- Brackets:
(
,)
- Exponents:
^
or**
- Divide:
/
- Multiply:
*
- Add:
+
- Subtract:
-
- Brackets:
- Scientific notation is available, e.g:
2e-3
- Anything to the right of a
#
is a comment, R will ignore this! - Functions are denoted by
function_name()
. Expressions inside the brackets are evaluated before being passed to the function, and functions can be nested. - Comparison operators:
<
,<=
,>
,>=
,==
,!=
- Use
all.equal
to compare numbers! -
<-
is the assignment operator. Anything to the right is evaluate, then stored in a variable named to the left. -
ls
lists all variables and functions you’ve created -
rm
can be used to remove them - When assigning values to function arguments, you must use
=
.
Project management with RStudio
- To create a new project, go to File -> New Project
- Some best practices:
- Treat data as read-only
- Keep cleaned data separate from raw dirty data
- Treat generated output as disposable
- Keep related data together
- Use a consistent naming scheme
Data Structures
- Use
read.csv()
to import data in memory -
class()
gives you the data class of your object - R automatic converts data types
- The functions:
length()
,nrow()
,head()
,tail()
, andstr()
can be useful to explore data. - Factors are a special class to deal with categorical data.
- Lists provide a flexible data type.
- Data frames are a special case of lists.
Exploring Data Frames
- R makes it easy to import datasets storred remotely
-
?data.frame
is a key data structure. It is alist
ofvectors
. -
cbind()
will add a column (vector) to a data.frame. -
rbind()
will add a row (list) to a data.frame.
Useful functions for querying data structures:
?str
structure, prints out a summary of the whole data structure?class
what is the data structure??head
print the firstn
elements (rows for two-dimensional objects)?tail
print the lastn
elements (rows for two-dimensional objects)?rownames
,?colnames
,?dimnames
retrieve or modify the row names and column names of an object.?length
get the number of elements in an atomic vector?nrow
,?ncol
,?dim
get the dimensions of a n-dimensional object (Won’t work on atomic vectors or lists).If your data frame contains factors, you need to take extra steps to add rows that contain new level values.
-
read.csv
to read in data in a regular structure-
sep
argument to specify the separator- “,” for comma separated
- “\t” for tab separated
- Other arguments:
-
header=TRUE
if there is a header row
-
-
Subsetting data
-
Elements can be accessed by:
- Index
- Name
- Logical vectors
-
[
single square brackets:- extract single elements or subset vectors
- e.g.
x[1]
extracts the first item from vector x. -
extract single elements of a list. The returned value will
be another
list()
. - extract columns from a data.frame
-
[
with two arguments to:-
extract rows and/or columns of
- matrices
- data.frames
- e.g.
x[1,2]
will extract the value in row 1, column 2. - e.g.
x[2,:]
will extract the entire second column of values.
-
extract rows and/or columns of
[[
double square brackets to extract items from lists.$
to access columns or list elements by namenegative indices skip elements
Data frame manipulation with dplyr
-
?select
to extract variables by name. -
?filter
return rows with matching conditions. -
?group_by
group data by one of more variables. -
?summarize
summarize multiple values to a single value. -
?mutate
add new variables to a data.frame. -
?count
and?n
to tally values in the data frame. - Combine operations using the
?"%>%"
pipe operator.
Control flow
- figures can be created with the grammar of graphics:
library(ggplot2)
-
ggplot
to create the base figure -
aes
thetics specify the data axes, shape, color, and data size -
geom
etry functions specify the type of plot, e.g.point
,line
,density
,box
-
geom
etry functions also add statistical transforms, e.g.geom_smooth
-
scale
functions change the mapping from data to aesthetics -
facet
functions stratify the figure into panels -
aes
thetics apply to individual layers, or can be set for the whole plot insideggplot
. -
theme
functions change the overall look of the plot - order of layers matters!
-
ggsave
to save a figure.
Writing data
-
write.table
to write out objects in regular format
Glossary
- argument
- A value given to a function or program when it runs. The term is often used interchangeably (and inconsistently) with parameter.
- assign
- To give a value a name by associating a variable with it.
- body
- (of a function): the statements that are executed when a function runs.
- comment
-
A remark in a program that is intended to help human readers understand
what is going on, but is ignored by the computer. Comments in Python, R,
and the Unix shell start with a
#
character and run to the end of the line; comments in SQL start with--
, and other languages have other conventions. - comma-separated values
- (CSV) A common textual representation for tables in which the values in each row are separated by commas.
- delimiter
- A character or characters used to separate individual values, such as the commas between columns in a CSV file.
- documentation
- Human-language text written to explain what software does, how it works, or how to use it.
- floating-point number
- A number containing a fractional part and an exponent. See also: integer.
- for loop
- A loop that is executed once for each value in some kind of set, list, or range. See also: while loop.
- index
- A subscript that specifies the location of a single value in a collection, such as a single pixel in an image.
- integer
- A whole number, such as -12343. See also: floating-point number.
- library
- In R, the directory(ies) where packages are stored.
- package
- A collection of R functions, data and compiled code in a well-defined format. Packages are stored in a library and loaded using the library() function.
- parameter
- A variable named in the function’s declaration that is used to hold a value passed into the call. The term is often used interchangeably (and inconsistently) with argument.
- return statement
- A statement that causes a function to stop executing and return a value to its caller immediately.
- sequence
- A collection of information that is presented in a specific order.
- shape
-
An array’s dimensions, represented as a vector. For example, a 5×3
array’s shape is
(5,3)
. - string
- Short for “character string”, a sequence of zero or more characters.
- syntax error
- A programming error that occurs when statements are in an order or contain characters not expected by the programming language.
- type
- The classification of something in a program (for example, the contents of a variable) as a kind of number (e.g. floating-point, integer), string, or something else. In R the command typeof() is used to query a variables type.
- while loop
- A loop that keeps executing as long as some condition is true. See also: for loop.