On Tue, Jan 28, 2014 at 6:46 PM, David Winsemius <dwinsem...@comcast.net>wrote:
>
> On Jan 27, 2014, at 1:30 PM, Dustin Fife wrote:
>
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I frequently get requests to do data analysis where the person
> > references an excel column. e.g., "I want to analyze [insert complex
> > variable name], located at column AAQ in Excel."  I've been doing is
> > gsub and inserting a part of the string for the complex variable name,
> > then going from there. But, I was trying to make function that returns
> > the following vector:
> >
> > excelVector = A, B, C, D,...AA, AB, AC...ZA, ZB, ZC,...AAA, AAB, AAC,
> etc.
> >
> > In other words, the argument would have one argument (n, or the number
> > of columns), then it would return a list like that shown above. Then,
> > all I would have to do is
> >
> > column.of.interest = which(excelVector=="AAQ")
> >
> > But I'm a bit stumped. The first part is easy:
> >
> > LETTERS[1:26]
> >
> > The next would probably use expand.grid, but all my potential
> > solutions are pretty clunky.
>
> Doesn't Excel still support R[n]C[m] references where n.m are integers?
>
>
Yes, Excel refers to this as the "R1C1 reference style".  You may need to
enable lthe associated option to make use of it.

-- 
Statistics & Software Consulting
GKX Group, GKX Associates Inc.
tel: 1-877-GKX-GROUP
email: ggrothendieck at gmail.com

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