Hi or if Dan prefers data frame (which is also a list)
CInew2 <-function(x,alpha){ data.frame(variable = deparse(substitute(x)), mean=mean(x), alpha = alpha) } > CInew2(JOBSTAT, 0.05) variable mean alpha 1 JOBSTAT 0.4567117 0.05 Regards Petr > > In this case you want to use a 'list' since you want character and > numerics returned: > > > JOBSTAT<-rnorm(10) > > > > > > # new function that does not return 'x' > > > > CInew <-function(x,alpha){ > + list(variable = deparse(substitute(x)), mean=mean(x), alpha = alpha) > + } > > > > CInew(JOBSTAT, 0.05) > $variable > [1] "JOBSTAT" > > $mean > [1] -1.113034 > > $alpha > [1] 0.05 > > > > > > > > On Sat, Aug 27, 2011 at 6:58 PM, Dan Abner <dan.abne...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > I want to it return: > > > > Variable Mean alpha > > JOBSTAT -0.1240675 0.05 > > > > How do I get the function parameter x to equal the name of the object that > > is specified as x as a character string? > > > > > > On Sat, Aug 27, 2011 at 6:41 PM, jim holtman <jholt...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> > >> The function is doing exactly what you are telling it to do. You have > >> 'cbind(x, mean(x), alpha)' which is creating a matrix where the first > >> column is all the values in 'x' and the next two are the recycled > >> values of mean and alpha. Is this what you want: > >> > >> > JOBSAT<-rnorm(10) > >> > > >> > CI<-function(x,alpha){ > >> + cbind(x,mean=mean(x),alpha) > >> + } > >> > CI(JOBSAT,.05) > >> x mean alpha > >> [1,] 0.8592324 -0.1240675 0.05 > >> [2,] -0.3128362 -0.1240675 0.05 > >> [3,] -2.0042218 -0.1240675 0.05 > >> [4,] -0.4675232 -0.1240675 0.05 > >> [5,] -0.5776273 -0.1240675 0.05 > >> [6,] 1.5696650 -0.1240675 0.05 > >> [7,] 0.8070593 -0.1240675 0.05 > >> [8,] -0.8257525 -0.1240675 0.05 > >> [9,] 0.6167636 -0.1240675 0.05 > >> [10,] -0.9054347 -0.1240675 0.05 > >> > > >> > # new function that does not return 'x' > >> > > >> > CInew <-function(x,alpha){ > >> + c(mean=mean(x), alpha = alpha) > >> + } > >> > CInew(JOBSAT,.05) > >> mean alpha > >> -0.1240675 0.0500000 > >> > >> > >> On Sat, Aug 27, 2011 at 5:38 PM, Dan Abner <dan.abne...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> > Hi everyone, > >> > > >> > How does one place an object name (in this case a vector name) into > >> > another > >> > object (while essentially masking the values of the first object? > >> > > >> > For example: > >> > > >> >> JOBSAT<-rnorm(40) > >> >> > >> >> CI<-function(x,alpha){ > >> > + result<-cbind(x,mean=mean(x),alpha) > >> > + print(result) > >> > + } > >> >> CI(JOBSAT,.05) > >> > > >> > I want this to return: > >> > > >> > Variable mean alpha > >> > JOBSTAT 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > Instead, I am getting: > >> > > >> > x mean alpha > >> > [1,] -1.07694997 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [2,] -1.13910850 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [3,] -0.21922026 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [4,] 0.38618008 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [5,] -1.24303799 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [6,] -0.74903752 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [7,] 0.96136975 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [8,] -0.38891237 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [9,] -0.20195871 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [10,] 0.78104508 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [11,] 0.87468778 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [12,] -1.89131480 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > > >> > > >> > Thank you! > >> > > >> > Dan > >> > > >> > [13,] 0.74377795 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [14,] -0.60006285 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [15,] -0.76661652 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [16,] 1.06005258 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [17,] 0.02173877 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [18,] -0.36558980 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [19,] -1.92481588 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [20,] -0.50337507 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [21,] 0.82205272 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [22,] 1.59277572 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > [23,] 0.59965718 0.02844131 0.05 > >> > > >> > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > >> > > >> > ______________________________________________ > >> > R-help@r-project.org mailing list > >> > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help > >> > PLEASE do read the posting guide > >> > http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html > >> > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. > >> > > >> > >> > >> > >> -- > >> Jim Holtman > >> Data Munger Guru > >> > >> What is the problem that you are trying to solve? > > > > > > > > -- > Jim Holtman > Data Munger Guru > > What is the problem that you are trying to solve? > > ______________________________________________ > R-help@r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help > PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.