Message-ID: <CAM_vjuk_B=0R1_q-nYYYk_dE85H7y9Cyt-03ebQK5O93XAm0dw@mail.gmail.com>
Date: 2011-10-13T18:53:54Z
From: Sarah Goslee
Subject: getting data associated with coordinates in a spatial data frame
In-Reply-To: <CB48FBE34FD7F64D8FFDBB410C26CF750138C72B8E07@EXCH07-VS1.spu.local>
On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 2:44 PM, Bailey, Daniel <bailed at spu.edu> wrote:
> Michael, that's half of the problem solved (whew!!). Now how do I change the data at that location?
You assign it a new value, just as for any assignment. Using the
example from my previous email:
> data(meuse.grid)
> m = SpatialPixelsDataFrame(points = meuse.grid[c("x", "y")], data = meuse.grid)
>
> m at data[coordinates(m)[,"x"] == 181100 & coordinates(m)[,"y"] == 333660,]
x y part.a part.b dist soil ffreq
5 181100 333660 1 0 0 1 1
>
> m at data[coordinates(m)[,"x"] == 181100 & coordinates(m)[,"y"] == 333660, "soil"] <- 5
>
> m at data[coordinates(m)[,"x"] == 181100 & coordinates(m)[,"y"] == 333660,]
x y part.a part.b dist soil ffreq
5 181100 333660 1 0 0 5 1
>
> This is not an intuitive way to manipulate data.
That's not what it's *for*. SGDFs are for storing and working with
spatial data, where all the components are needed for the spatial
reference. If you need to manipulate a lot of things, you're better
off doing it before you construct the SGDF, or you can cheat by
extracting the data slot, working with it, then reassigning it as a
single unit.
mydata <- m at data
# do stuff
m at data <- mydata
You might also benefit from reading "Applied Spatial Data Analysis
with R" by Bivand et al.
Sarah
--
Sarah Goslee
http://www.functionaldiversity.org