Message-ID: <4D37FBEA.5070100@uni-hamburg.de>
Date: 2011-01-20T09:10:02Z
From: Ivan Calandra
Subject: subsets
In-Reply-To: <1295513581.1717.43.camel@den2042-desktop>
Hi!
I think you should read the intro to R, as well as ?"[" and ?subset. It
should help you to understand.
Let's say your data is in a data.frame called df:
# 1. ah and ihd
df_ah_ihd <- df[df$diagnosis=="ah" | df$diagnosis=="ihd", ] ## the "|"
is the boolean OR (you want one OR the other). Note the last comma
#2. ah
df_ah <- df[df$diagnosis=="ah", ]
#3. ihd
df_ihd <- df[df$diagnosis=="ihd", ]
You could do the same using subset() if you feel better with this function.
HTH,
Ivan
Le 1/20/2011 09:53, Den a ?crit :
> Dear R people
> Could you please help.
>
> Basically, there are two variables in my data set. Each patient ('id')
> may have one or more diseases ('diagnosis'). It looks like
>
> id diagnosis
> 1 ah
> 2 ah
> 2 ihd
> 2 im
> 3 ah
> 3 stroke
> 4 ah
> 4 ihd
> 4 angina
> 5 ihd
> ..............
> Q: How to make three data sets:
> 1. Patients with ah and ihd
> 2. Patients with ah but no ihd
> 3. Patients with ihd but no ah?
>
> If you have any ideas could just guide what should I look for. Is a
> subset or aggregate, or loops, or something else??? I am a bit lost. (F1
> F1 F1 !!!:)
> Thank you
>
> ______________________________________________
> R-help at r-project.org mailing list
> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
> PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
>
--
Ivan CALANDRA
PhD Student
University of Hamburg
Biozentrum Grindel und Zoologisches Museum
Abt. S?ugetiere
Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3
D-20146 Hamburg, GERMANY
+49(0)40 42838 6231
ivan.calandra at uni-hamburg.de
**********
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