On Wed, 23 Feb 2006, Peter Dalgaard wrote: > "Gabor Grothendieck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > Try this: > > > > subset(iris, select = - Species) > > Or, canonically, > > nm <- names(iris) > iris[, nm != "Species" ] > > iris[, -match("Species", nm)] > > > > > On 2/22/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > I agree with the submitter that this needs some kind of solution. > > > Although data.frame[,-12] works, how do I drop a named column (the > > > most common use case)? (I found this bug while searching for an > > > answer.)
That code with match only works if "Species" is actually a column of iris. If not, your result depends on whether you have a data.frame (an error) or a matrix (a column of NA's). I found some mail in a 15 year old sent-mail file that suggested allowing the tag 'except=' on any of the arguments to "[" to replace/extend the limited negative integer convention. The idea was that iris[ except=c(10:20), except=c("Petal.Width","Petal.Length")) ] would return all rows except 10:20 and all columns except the ones named. iris[ except=integer(0), ] would return all rows of iris, while iris[-integer(0), ] returns no rows of iris. This abuses the tag= notation, but the "[" function doesn't really support the i= and j= tags that some people expect. This would take care of the problem that subset(data.frame,select=-name) only lets you omit columns. The mail had a version of [.data.frame (for Splus 2.1?) that implemented this, although, if it is to be used it should be implemented in the most primitive [ code so all methods use it. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bill Dunlap Insightful Corporation bill at insightful dot com 360-428-8146 "All statements in this message represent the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect Insightful Corporation policy or position." ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel