Hello,
A way to see this is with ?class
# OP's code
typeof(c(1,"2")) # "character"
d.f <- data.frame(C=c(1,"2"))
typeof(d.f$C)??? # "integer"
# And check the objects' classes
class(c(1,"2")) # "character"
class(d.f$C)??? # "factor"
Hope this helps,
Rui Barradas
?s 08:19 de 19/07/19, Peter Langfelder escreveu:
I think your character vector got converted to a factor. See ?options,
section stringsAsFactors:
????? ?stringsAsFactors?: The default setting for arguments of
?????????? ?data.frame? and ?read.table?.
The default is TRUE, so strings get converted to factors when building
data frames.
Set options(stringsAsFactors=FALSE) and try again.
Peter
On Fri, Jul 19, 2019 at 12:15 AM Michael Meyer via R-devel
<r-devel at r-project.org> wrote:
Greetings,
Running R 3.5.0 under Windows 7
typeof(c(1,"2")) yields "character" as expected. But in
d.f <- data.frame(C=c(1,"2"))
typeof(d.f$C) yields "integer".
Is this a bug?
Michael Meyer