I often find questions where people have somehow ended up with an unnamed list of unnamed character vectors and they want to bind them row-wise into a data.frame
. Here is an example:
library(magrittr)
data <- cbind(LETTERS[1:3],1:3,4:6,7:9,c(12,15,18)) %>%
split(1:3) %>% unname
data
#[[1]]
#[1] "A" "1" "4" "7" "12"
#
#[[2]]
#[1] "B" "2" "5" "8" "15"
#
#[[3]]
#[1] "C" "3" "6" "9" "18"
One typical approach is with do.call
from base R.
do.call(rbind, data) %>% as.data.frame
# V1 V2 V3 V4 V5
#1 A 1 4 7 12
#2 B 2 5 8 15
#3 C 3 6 9 18
Perhaps a less efficient approach is with Reduce
from base R.
Reduce(rbind,data, init = NULL) %>% as.data.frame
# V1 V2 V3 V4 V5
#1 A 1 4 7 12
#2 B 2 5 8 15
#3 C 3 6 9 18
However, when we consider more modern packages such as dplyr
or data.table
, some of the approaches that might immediately come to mind don't work because the vectors are unnamed or aren't a list.
library(dplyr)
bind_rows(data)
#Error: Argument 1 must have names
library(data.table)
rbindlist(data)
#Error in rbindlist(data) :
# Item 1 of input is not a data.frame, data.table or list
One approach might be to set_names
on the vectors.
library(purrr)
map_df(data, ~set_names(.x, seq_along(.x)))
# A tibble: 3 x 5
# `1` `2` `3` `4` `5`
# <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr>
#1 A 1 4 7 12
#2 B 2 5 8 15
#3 C 3 6 9 18
However, this seems like more steps than it needs to be.
Therefore, my question is what is an efficient tidyverse
or data.table
approach to binding an unnamed list of unnamed character vectors into a data.frame
row-wise?
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