Hello,

Inline.

Às 13:32 de 26/10/2023, Ebert,Timothy Aaron escreveu:
The "problem" goes away if you use

x$C <- y[1,]

Actually, if I understand correctly, the OP wants the column:


x$C <- y[,1]


In this case it will produce the same output because y is a df with only one row. But that is a very special case, the general case would be to extract the column.

Hope this helps,

Rui Barradas


If you have another row in your x, say:
x <- data.frame(A=c(1,4), B=c(2,5), C=c(3,6))

then your code
x$C <- y[1]
returns an error.

If y has the same number of rows as x$C then R has the same outcome as in your 
example.

It looks like your code tells R to replace all of column C (including the name) 
with all of vector y.

Maybe unexpected, but not a bug. It is consistent.


-----Original Message-----
From: R-help <r-help-boun...@r-project.org> On Behalf Of Rui Barradas
Sent: Thursday, October 26, 2023 6:43 AM
To: Christian Asseburg <rh...@moin.fi>; r-help@r-project.org
Subject: Re: [R] Bug in print for data frames?

[External Email]

Às 07:18 de 25/10/2023, Christian Asseburg escreveu:
Hi! I came across this unexpected behaviour in R. First I thought it was a bug in 
the assignment operator <- but now I think it's maybe a bug in the way data 
frames are being printed. What do you think?

Using R 4.3.1:

x <- data.frame(A = 1, B = 2, C = 3)
y <- data.frame(A = 1)
x
    A B C
1 1 2 3
x$B <- y$A # works as expected
x
    A B C
1 1 1 3
x$C <- y[1] # makes C disappear
x
    A B A
1 1 1 1
str(x)
'data.frame':   1 obs. of  3 variables:
   $ A: num 1
   $ B: num 1
   $ C:'data.frame':      1 obs. of  1 variable:
    ..$ A: num 1

Why does the print(x) not show "C" as the name of the third element? I did mess 
up the data frame (and this was a mistake on my part), but finding the bug was harder 
because print(x) didn't show the C any longer.

Thanks. With best wishes -

. . . Christian

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Hello,

To expand on the good answers already given, I will present two other example 
data sets.

Example 1. Imagine that instead of assigning just one column from y to x$C you 
assign two columns. The result is a data.frame column. See what is displayed as 
the columns names.
And unlike what happens with `[`, when asssigning columns 1:2, the operator 
`[[` doesn't work. You will have to extract the columns y$A and y$B one by one.



x <- data.frame(A = 1, B = 2, C = 3)
y <- data.frame(A = 1, B = 4)
str(y)
#> 'data.frame':    1 obs. of  2 variables:
#>  $ A: num 1
#>  $ B: num 4

x$C <- y[1:2]
x
#>   A B C.A C.B
#> 1 1 2   1   4

str(x)
#> 'data.frame':    1 obs. of  3 variables:
#>  $ A: num 1
#>  $ B: num 2
#>  $ C:'data.frame':   1 obs. of  2 variables:
#>   ..$ A: num 1
#>   ..$ B: num 4

x[[1:2]]  # doesn't work
#> Error in .subset2(x, i, exact = exact): subscript out of bounds



Example 2. Sometimes it is usefull to get a result like this first and then 
correct the resulting df. For instance, when computing more than one summary 
statistics.

str(agg)  below shows that the result summary stats is a matrix, so you have a 
column-matrix. And once again the displayed names reflect that.

The trick to make the result a df is to extract all but the last column as a 
sub-df, extract the last column's values as a matrix (which it is) and then 
cbind the two together.

cbind is a generic function. Since the first argument to cbind is a sub-df, the 
method called is cbind.data.frame and the result is a df.



df1 <- data.frame(A = rep(c("a", "b", "c"), 5L), X = 1:30)

# the anonymous function computes more than one summary statistics # note that it 
returns a named vector agg <- aggregate(X ~ A, df1, \(x) c(Mean = mean(x), S = 
sd(x))) agg
#>   A    X.Mean       X.S
#> 1 a 14.500000  9.082951
#> 2 b 15.500000  9.082951
#> 3 c 16.500000  9.082951

# similar effect as in the OP, The difference is that the last # column is a 
matrix, not a data.frame
str(agg)
#> 'data.frame':    3 obs. of  2 variables:
#>  $ A: chr  "a" "b" "c"
#>  $ X: num [1:3, 1:2] 14.5 15.5 16.5 9.08 9.08 ...
#>   ..- attr(*, "dimnames")=List of 2
#>   .. ..$ : NULL
#>   .. ..$ : chr [1:2] "Mean" "S"

# nc is just a convenience, avoids repeated calls to ncol nc <- ncol(agg) 
cbind(agg[-nc], agg[[nc]])
#>   A Mean        S
#> 1 a 14.5 9.082951
#> 2 b 15.5 9.082951
#> 3 c 16.5 9.082951

# all is well
cbind(agg[-nc], agg[[nc]]) |> str()
#> 'data.frame':    3 obs. of  3 variables:
#>  $ A   : chr  "a" "b" "c"
#>  $ Mean: num  14.5 15.5 16.5
#>  $ S   : num  9.08 9.08 9.08



If the anonymous function hadn't returned a named vetor, the new column names would have been 
"1". "2", try it.


Hope this helps,

Rui Barradas



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