R provides two different methods for accessing the elements of a list or data.frame: [] and [[]].
[]
[[]]
What is the difference between the two, and when should I use one over the other?
The R Language Definition is handy for answering these types of questions:
R has three basic indexing operators, with syntax displayed by the following examples x[i] x[i, j] x[[i]] x[[i, j]] x$a x$"a" For vectors and matrices the [[ forms are rarely used, although they have some slight semantic differences from the [ form (e.g. it drops any names or dimnames attribute, and that partial matching is used for character indices). When indexing multi-dimensional structures with a single index, x[[i]] or x[i] will return the ith sequential element of x. For lists, one generally uses [[ to select any single element, whereas [ returns a list of the selected elements. The [[ form allows only a single element to be selected using integer or character indices, whereas [ allows indexing by vectors. Note though that for a list, the index can be a vector and each element of the vector is applied in turn to the list, the selected component, the selected component of that component, and so on. The result is still a single element.
R has three basic indexing operators, with syntax displayed by the following examples
x[i] x[i, j] x[[i]] x[[i, j]] x$a x$"a"
For vectors and matrices the [[ forms are rarely used, although they have some slight semantic differences from the [ form (e.g. it drops any names or dimnames attribute, and that partial matching is used for character indices). When indexing multi-dimensional structures with a single index, x[[i]] or x[i] will return the ith sequential element of x.
[[
[
x[[i]]
x[i]
i
x
For lists, one generally uses [[ to select any single element, whereas [ returns a list of the selected elements.
The [[ form allows only a single element to be selected using integer or character indices, whereas [ allows indexing by vectors. Note though that for a list, the index can be a vector and each element of the vector is applied in turn to the list, the selected component, the selected component of that component, and so on. The result is still a single element.
1.4m articles
1.4m replys
5 comments
57.0k users