I have a data frame with counts of different kinds of fruits of different people. Like below
apple banana orange
Tim 3 0 2
Tom 0
Here's your data.frame
:
x <- structure(list(apple = c(3L, 0L, 1L), banana = 0:2, orange = c(2L,
1L, 2L)), .Names = c("apple", "banana", "orange"), class = "data.frame", row.names = c("Tim",
"Tom", "Bob"))
And your matrix:
as.matrix((x > 0) + 0)
apple banana orange
Tim 1 0 1
Tom 0 1 1
Bob 1 1 1
I had no idea that a quick pre-bedtime posting would generate any discussion, but the discussions themselves are quite interesting, so I wanted to summarize here:
My instinct was to simply take the fact that underneath a TRUE
and FALSE
in R, are the numbers 1
and 0
. If you try (a not so good way) to check for equivalence, such as 1 == TRUE
or 0 == FALSE
, you'll get TRUE
. My shortcut way (which turns out to take more time than the correct, or at least more conceptually correct way) was to just add 0
to my TRUE
s and FALSE
s, since I know that R would coerce the logical vectors to numeric.
The correct, or at least, more appropriate way, would be to convert the output using as.numeric
(I think that's what @JoshO'Brien intended to write). BUT.... unfortunately, that removes the dimensional attributes of the input, so you need to re-convert the resulting vector to a matrix, which, as it turns out, is still faster than adding 0
as I did in my answer.
Having read the comments and criticisms, I thought I would add one more option---using apply
to loop through the columns and use the as.numeric
approach. That is slower than manually re-creating the matrix, but slightly faster than adding 0
to the logical comparison.
x <- data.frame(replicate(1e4,sample(0:1e3)))
library(rbenchmark)
benchmark(X1 = {
x1 <- as.matrix((x > 0) + 0)
},
X2 = {
x2 <- apply(x, 2, function(y) as.numeric(y > 0))
},
X3 = {
x3 <- as.numeric(as.matrix(x) > 0)
x3 <- matrix(x3, nrow = 1001)
},
X4 = {
x4 <- ifelse(x > 0, 1, 0)
},
columns = c("test", "replications", "elapsed",
"relative", "user.self"))
# test replications elapsed relative user.self
# 1 X1 100 116.618 1.985 110.711
# 2 X2 100 105.026 1.788 94.070
# 3 X3 100 58.750 1.000 46.007
# 4 X4 100 382.410 6.509 311.567
all.equal(x1, x2, check.attributes=FALSE)
# [1] TRUE
all.equal(x1, x3, check.attributes=FALSE)
# [1] TRUE
all.equal(x1, x4, check.attributes=FALSE)
# [1] TRUE
Thanks for the discussion y'all!