Richardson, Patrick <patrick.richard...@vai.org> [Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 
09:31:35PM CEST]:
> If I have a table (we'll call it, "test") containing seven columns (as below):
> 
> i     x1      x2      x3      x4      x5      y
> 0     1.125   0.232   7.160   0.0859 8.905 1.5563
> 7     0.920   0.268   8.804   0.0865 7.388 0.8976
> 15    0.835   0.271   8.108   0.0852 5.348 0.7482
> 22    1.000   0.237   6.370   0.0838 8.056 0.7160
> 29    1.150   0.192   6.441   0.0821 6.960 0.3130
> 37    0.990   0.202   5.154   0.0792 5.690 0.3617
> 44    0.840   0.184   5.896   0.0812 6.932 0.1139
> 58    0.650   0.200   5.336   0.0806 5.400 0.1139
> 
> 
> Is there a simple command to break this table into individual variables 
> without having to code:
> 
> i <- test$i
> x1 <- test$x1
> x2 <- test$x2

?attach

Does this do what you want?


-- 
Johannes Hüsing               There is something fascinating about science. 
                              One gets such wholesale returns of conjecture 
mailto:johan...@huesing.name  from such a trifling investment of fact.          
      
http://derwisch.wikidot.com         (Mark Twain, "Life on the Mississippi")

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