Reinstall R but this time choose the Mac version that includes tcl. You shouldn't have to separately install it.
On Fri, Jan 1, 2010 at 11:20 AM, <donahc...@me.com> wrote: > Okay, I don't know if I'm blocking because of my other programming language > experience of if I'm just being dense. > > I have a data.frame with high,open,low,last,day, and start_time time > columns. What I want to do is get all the rows with the same day and > process each of those columns. If I was able to run a query against the > data.frame I would be want something like: > > result = all the rows where the day is equal to 2007-12-05 > > Then I would want get max(result["high"]), min(result["low"]) > > How do I do this? I tired sqldf, but its complaining about libtcl0.5.8 not > being found. I'm on OS X 10.5.8 and haven't yet tired to install a new > version of tcl in /usr/local. > > Here's the dataframe: For sqldf, unlike other platforms where all versions of R include tcl, on the Mac there are versions of R with and without tcl so you need to reinstall R using a version that includes it. However, in this case since you are dealing specifically with open/high/low/close series, the xts package already has specific facilities: library(xts) library(chron) # assume object in attachment to original post is called d. # Convert it to xts object and set columns to OHLC names it understands. x <- xts(d[1:4], as.chron(paste(d$day, d$start_time))) colnames(x) <- c("High", "Open", "Low", "Close") xday <- to.daily(x) head(xday) ______________________________________________ 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.