Adding a simplify argument to by would suit me fine. In my (limited) experience in using R, the automatic simplification that R does in various situations is one of it's most troublesome features. It means that I cannot expect a program to work even if I give it data of the same types as I always have before; any time a dimension is reduced to 1 bad things happen.
Is there a master switch I can set so dropping never happens automatically? Can you please have an option that by reads so I can indicate that by should never drop/simplify? -Alex On 17 Apr 2008, at 07:03, Prof Brian Ripley wrote: > Unfortunately your proposed change changes the type of the output: > simplification is intended in many applications of by(). > > Before: > >> str(by(mytimes$date[1], mytimes$set[1], function(x)x)) > by [, 1] 1.21e+09 > - attr(*, "dimnames")=List of 1 > ..$ mytimes$set[1]: chr "1" > - attr(*, "call")= language by.default(data = mytimes$date[1], > INDICES = mytimes$set[1], FUN = function(x) x) > > After: > >> str(by(mytimes$date[1], mytimes$set[1], function(x)x)) > List of 1 > $ 1: POSIXct[1:1], format: "2008-04-17 06:53:31" > - attr(*, "dim")= int 1 > - attr(*, "dimnames")=List of 1 > ..$ mytimes$set[1]: chr "1" > - attr(*, "call")= language by.default(data = mytimes$date[1], > INDICES = mytimes$set[1], FUN = function(x) x) > - attr(*, "class")= chr "by" > > c() does not do the same thing as unlist() in general, and it is > untrue that 'c does not strip class'. What happens in your example > is that there is a c() method for your class (and not many others). > > What we could is to add a 'simplify' argument to by() so you can > control the simplification. > > > On Tue, 15 Apr 2008, Alex Brown wrote: > >> summary: >> >> The function 'by' inconsistently strips class from the data to which >> it is applied. >> >> quick reason: >> >> tapply strips class when simplify is set to TRUE (the default) due to >> the class stripping behaviour of unlist. >> >> quick answer: >> >> This can be fixed by invoking tapply with simplify=FALSE, or changing >> tapply to use do.call(c instead of unlist >> >> executable example: >> >> mytimes=data.frame(date = 1:3 + Sys.time(), set = c(1,1,2)) >> >> by(mytimes$date, mytimes$set, function(x)x) >> >> INDICES: 1 >> [1] "2008-04-15 11:41:38 BST" "2008-04-15 11:41:39 BST" >> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >> INDICES: 2 >> [1] "2008-04-15 11:41:40 BST" >> >> by(mytimes[1,]$date, mytimes[1,]$set, function(x)x) >> >> INDICES: 1 >> [1] 1208256099 >> >> why this is a problem: >> >> This is a problem when you are feeding the output of this by into a >> function which expects the class to be maintained. I see this >> problem >> when constructing >> >> reason: >> >> tapply strips class when simplify is set to TRUE (the default) due to >> the behaviour of unlist: >> >> "Where possible the list elements are coerced to a common mode during >> the unlisting, and so the result often ends up as a character vector. >> Vectors will be coerced to the highest type of the components in the >> hierarchy NULL < raw < logical < integer < real < complex < character >> < list < expression: pairlists are treated as lists." >> >> solution: >> >> This problem can be fixed in the function by.data.frame by modifying >> the call to tapply in the function "by": >> >> by.data.frame = function (data, INDICES, FUN, ...) >> { >> if (!is.list(INDICES)) { >> IND <- vector("list", 1) >> IND[[1]] <- INDICES >> names(IND) <- deparse(substitute(INDICES))[1] >> } >> else IND <- INDICES >> FUNx <- function(x) FUN(data[x, ], ...) >> nd <- nrow(data) >> <<<< >> ans <- eval(substitute(tapply(1:nd, IND, FUNx)), data) >> ==== >> ans <- eval(substitute(tapply(1:nd, IND, FUNx, simplify=FALSE)), >> data) >> >>>> >> attr(ans, "call") <- match.call() >> class(ans) <- "by" >> ans >> } >> >> alternative solution: >> >> the call in tapply to unlist(ans, recursive=F) can be replaced by >> do.call(c,ans, recursive=F) to fix this issue, since c does not strip >> class. >> >> However, I haven't taken the time to work out if this will work in >> all >> cases. >> >> for example: >> >> function (X, INDEX, FUN = NULL, ..., simplify = TRUE) >> { >> FUN <- if (!is.null(FUN)) >> match.fun(FUN) >> if (!is.list(INDEX)) >> INDEX <- list(INDEX) >> nI <- length(INDEX) >> namelist <- vector("list", nI) >> names(namelist) <- names(INDEX) >> extent <- integer(nI) >> nx <- length(X) >> one <- 1L >> group <- rep.int(one, nx) >> ngroup <- one >> for (i in seq.int(INDEX)) { >> index <- as.factor(INDEX[[i]]) >> if (length(index) != nx) >> stop("arguments must have same length") >> namelist[[i]] <- levels(index) >> extent[i] <- nlevels(index) >> group <- group + ngroup * (as.integer(index) - one) >> ngroup <- ngroup * nlevels(index) >> } >> if (is.null(FUN)) >> return(group) >> ans <- lapply(split(X, group), FUN, ...) >> index <- as.integer(names(ans)) >> if (simplify && all(unlist(lapply(ans, length)) == 1)) { >> ansmat <- array(dim = extent, dimnames = namelist) >> <<<< >> ans <- unlist(ans, recursive = FALSE) >> ==== >> ans <- do.call(c, ans, recursive = FALSE) >> >>>> >> } >> else { >> ansmat <- array(vector("list", prod(extent)), dim = extent, >> dimnames = namelist) >> } >> if (length(index)) { >> names(ans) <- NULL >> ansmat[index] <- ans >> } >> ansmat >> } >> >> Alexander Brown >> Principal Engineer >> Transitive >> Maybrook House, 40 Blackfriars Street, Manchester M3 2EG >> Phone: +44 (0)161 836 2321 Fax: +44 (0)161 836 2399 Mobile: +44 >> (0)7980 708 221 >> www.transitive.com >> * The leader in cross-platform virtualization >> >> ______________________________________________ >> 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. >> > > -- > Brian D. Ripley, [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Professor of Applied Statistics, http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~ripley/ > University of Oxford, Tel: +44 1865 272861 (self) > 1 South Parks Road, +44 1865 272866 (PA) > Oxford OX1 3TG, UK Fax: +44 1865 272595 ______________________________________________ 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.