5

I would like to see a list of all the possible values, without repetition, in a column of a data frame. Something like:

as.set(series["begin_year"][,1])

for the column "begin_year" although as.set doesn't exist.

2
  • 2
    Will unique() get the job done? Or, if column is a factor, levels()? Or am I misunderstanding your question?
    – jthetzel
    Oct 31, 2011 at 12:32
  • 1
    @jthetzel, make it answer ;-)
    – Max
    Oct 31, 2011 at 12:38

2 Answers 2

7

unique() [or levels(), if the column is a factor].

Here's the reproducible example:

dat <- OrchardSprays
dat$rowpos
unique(dat$rowpos)
dat$treatment
unique(dat$treatment)
levels(dat$treatment) 

EDIT Note that levels() will return unique levels of the factor, even if the level is unused. Consider:

dat2 <- subset(dat, treatment != "A")
unique(dat2$treatment)
# [1] D E B H G F C
# Levels: A B C D E F G H
levels(dat2$treatment) 
# [1] "A" "B" "C" "D" "E" "F" "G" "H"

You can get rid of the unused levels with droplevels():

dat2$treatment <- droplevels(dat2$treatment)
levels(dat2$treatment)
# [1] "B" "C" "D" "E" "F" "G" "H"
2
  • A good thing to note here is that the word "set" is used strictly to work with algebraic set theory functions. You really only needed a vector here so far as I can tell, which is why unique and levels is the way to go. Oct 31, 2011 at 13:58
  • <pedantic> It's not algebraic set theory. It's just (elementary) set theory. </pedantic> :) There's a field of algebraic set theory, but the intersection with relevant R functions, minus those relevant to set theory, is...
    – Iterator
    Oct 31, 2011 at 17:14
5

The unique function should do this, and there's also a few other set-related functions: union, intersect, setdiff, setequal and is.element that are documented on the help(union) page.

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