The function "as.vector" will remove the names:

> t.test(1:9)$statistic
      t
5.477226
> as.vector(t.test(1:9)$statistic)
[1] 5.477226

     Is this what you want?  spencer graves

Michael Rennie wrote:

Hi, there

I am quite sure there is an easy answer to this, but I am unsure how to gather a bunch of t-statistics in an organized format.

I am trying to generate a list of t-statistics for a randomization routine. If I try to collect a bunch of t-statistics from a run, this is what happens:




M <- 10 ; simt <- NULL
for(i in 1:M)


+ {
+ perm<-sample(site,replace=F)
+ + permute<-cbind(perm, site, a, b, c)
+ + m<- order(perm)
+ + m1<-cbind(perm[m], site[m], a[m], b[m], c[m])
+ + black<-c((m1[1:5,5]),(m1[11:15,5]))
+ #black
+ + white<-c((m1[6:10,5]),(m1[16:20,5]))
+ #white
+ + sims <- t.test(black,white,var.equal=FALSE,mu=0)$statistic
+ simt<-c(simt,sims)
+ #simt
+ } # Next i (next simulation)


simt


t t t t t t t 0.3474150 0.1542973 -0.4044992 1.2466663 -0.2933944 -0.5809257 0.7799080 t t t -1.4132713 1.2048335 -0.6596936

Which gives me a list, but not in a form that I can do anything with. This is in stark contrast to what happens when requesting p-values, which gives output like this:



M <- 10 ; simt <- NULL


for(i in 1:M)


+ {
+ perm<-sample(site,replace=F)
+ + permute<-cbind(perm, site, a, b, c)
+ + m<- order(perm)
+ + m1<-cbind(perm[m], site[m], a[m], b[m], c[m])
+ + black<-c((m1[1:5,5]),(m1[11:15,5]))
+ #black
+ + white<-c((m1[6:10,29]),(m1[16:20,5]))
+ #white
+ + sims <- t.test(black,white,var.equal=FALSE,mu=0)$p.value
+ simt<-c(simt,sims)
+ #simt
+ } # Next i (next simulation)


simt


[1] 0.6763749 0.7480091 0.9447851 0.3342029 0.7852635 0.3199006 0.5272153
[8] 0.3863616 0.7333693 0.7268907

Now THAT'S what I'd like to get for my t-statistics- a nice vector (simt) that I can deal with later, rather than the output I am currently getting (the first output above).

Does anyone know a way to extract JUST the t-statistics from the t.test, without the "t" character header, so I can generate a nice little vector? Alternatively, can I manipulate the output I am currently getting for the t-
statistics so that I can isolate just the numbers?





______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide! http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html

Reply via email to