If you want to extract the third element of each list element you can do:
List <- list(c(1:3), c(4:6), c(7:9))
lapply(List, '[[', 3) # This returns a list with only the third element
unlist(lapply(List, '[[', 3)) # This returns a vector with the third element
Using your example and taking into account @GSee comment you can do:
yourList <- list(c("","668","12345_s_at","667", "4.899777748","49.53333333",
"10.10930207", "1.598228663","5.087437057"),
c("","376", "6789_at", "375", "4.899655078","136.3333333",
"27.82508792", "2.20223398", "5.087437057"),
c("", "19265", "12351_s_at", "19264", "4.897730912",
"889.3666667", "181.5874908","1.846451572","5.087437057" ))
sapply(yourList, '[[', 3)
[1] "12345_s_at" "6789_at" "12351_s_at"
Next time you can provide some data using dput
on a portion of your dataset so we can reproduce your problem easily.
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