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r - Consistent factor levels for same value over different datasets

I'm not sure if I completely understand how factors work. So please correct me in an easy to understand way if I'm wrong.

I always assumed that when doing regressions and what not, R behind the scenes concerts categorical variables into integers, but this part was outside of my train of thought.

It would use the categorical values in a training set and after building a model, check for the same categorical value in the test dataset. Whatever the underlying 'levels' were - didnt matter to me.

However, I've been thinking more... and need clarification - especially if I'm doing this wrong on how to fix it.

     train= c("March","April","January","November","January")
     train=as.factor(train)
     str(train)
     Factor w/ 4 levels "April","January",..: 3 1 2 4 2

     test= c(c("March","April"))
     test=as.factor(test)
      str(test)
     # Factor w/ 2 levels "April","March",..:  1 2

question

If you see the above, it creates factor levels, I believe is what they are called for each month. However, the levels do not match up necessarily.

For example, in test "APRIL" is "1" in both, but in train "JANUARY" is 2 while "MARCH" is 2 in the 2nd.

If I was to incorporate this into a model, I don't think I would get an error since all the categorical values in the TEST set are in the training set already...but would hte appropriate coeffecients/values be used?

please help i'm very confused

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When you use as.factor to convert / coerce a vector into a factor, R takes all unique values of your vector and associates a numerical id to each of them; it also has a default sorting method to decide which value gets 1, 2 etc.

If you have different vectors which live in a common "universe" of values and you want to convert them into consistent factors (i.e. a value appearing in different vectors / dfs is associated to the same numerical id), do this:

x <- letters[1:5]
y <- letters[3:8]
allvalues <- unique(union(x,y))  # superfluous but I think it adds clarity
x <- factor(x, levels = allvalues)
y <- factor(y, levels = allvalues)
str(x)   # Factor w/ 8 levels "a","b","c","d",..: 1 2 3 4 5
str(y)   # Factor w/ 8 levels "a","b","c","d",..: 3 4 5 6 7 8

Edit

A small experiment to show that R is smart enough to recognize factor values in different vectors, even if they had been assigned inconsistent numerical ids:

y <- sample(1:2, size = 20, replace = T)
x <- factor(letters[y], levels = c("b","a"))  # so a~2 and b~1
y <- y + rnorm(0, 0.2, n = 20)
Set <- data.frame(x = x, y = y)
fit <- lm(data = Set, y ~ x)

To get descriptions of everything: str(x), str(y), summary(fit).

So fit is trained to associate x = a (which as a factor has a numerical tag of 2) with the value y ~= 1 and y = b with the value x ~= 2.

Now let's make a "confusing" test set:

x2 <- factor(c("a","b"), levels = c("c","d","a","b"))
str(x2)   # Factor w/ 4 levels "c","d","a","b": 3 4

Let's use predict to see what R makes of it:

predict(fit, newdata = data.frame(x = x2))
#        1        2 
# 1.060569 1.961109 

Which is what we'd expect from R...


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