This has really challenged my ability to debug R code.
I want to use ddply()
to apply the same functions to different columns that are sequentially named; eg. a, b, c. To do this I intend to repeatedly pass the column name as a string and use the eval(parse(text=ColName))
to allow the function to reference it. I grabbed this technique from another answer.
And this works well, until I put ddply()
inside another function. Here is the sample code:
# Required packages:
library(plyr)
myFunction <- function(x, y){
NewColName = "a"
z = ddply(x, y, summarize,
Ave = mean(eval(parse(text=NewColName)), na.rm=TRUE)
)
return(z)
}
a = c(1,2,3,4)
b = c(0,0,1,1)
c = c(5,6,7,8)
df = data.frame(a,b,c)
sv = c("b")
#This works.
ColName = "a"
ddply(df, sv, summarize,
Ave = mean(eval(parse(text=ColName)), na.rm=TRUE)
)
#This doesn't work
#Produces error: "Error in parse(text = NewColName) : object 'NewColName' not found"
myFunction(df,sv)
#Output in both cases should be
# b Ave
#1 0 1.5
#2 1 3.5
Any ideas? NewColName is even defined inside the function!
I thought the answer to this question, loops-to-create-new-variables-in-ddply, might help me but I've done enough head banging for today and it's time to raise my hand and ask for help.
question from:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6955128/object-not-found-error-with-ddply-inside-a-function 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…