find the permutation function of a sorting
Perhaps the question was "what is indexing"?
On May 23, 2018 5:06:39 AM GMT+02:00, David Winsemius <dwinsemius at comcast.net> wrote:
On May 22, 2018, at 10:57 PM, John <miaojpm at gmail.com> wrote: Thanks, David. I got the answer from the web. Is there any easy way to permute a set (e.g., a set of characters) by
the permutation it returns? Thanks,
x <- c(10,7,4,3,8,2) sort(x, index.return=TRUE)
$x [1] 2 3 4 7 8 10 $ix [1] 6 4 3 2 5 1
I don't understand what is being requested. The $ix value is the same as the one returned `by order`. David.
2018-05-23 10:49 GMT+08:00 David Winsemius <dwinsemius at comcast.net>:
On May 22, 2018, at 10:06 PM, John <miaojpm at gmail.com> wrote: Hi, Is there any way to find the permutation function of the sorting
and to
apply the function (or its inverse) elsewhere? For example, the following permutation function from the sorting
in the
matrix form is c(1,2,3), c(2,1,3)
sort(c("bc","ac","dd"))
[1] "ac" "bc" "dd"
I think you are asking for the `order` function.
I try to find it in the permutations/permute package, but I can't
find it
John
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