1

I have a matrix with one column and many rows, each row is character string of equal length, it looks like by using the following code:

a = list("GTCA", "GACA")
library(plyr)
df <- ldply(a)

I want to convert it into a matrix with multiple columns, the number of columns equal the character string length. The wanted result should look like by executing the following code:

a = list(c("G","T","C","A"), c("G","A","C","A"))
library(plyr)
df <- ldply(a)

How can I do it in R? Thanks!

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  • 1
    The term "list" is a distinctly different animal than "matrix"
    – IRTFM
    Aug 14, 2013 at 22:12

3 Answers 3

5
do.call(rbind, sapply(a, strsplit, "") )
#-------
     [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4]
[1,] "G"  "T"  "C"  "A" 
[2,] "G"  "A"  "C"  "A" 

You did say you wanted a matrix, right? If you wanted to do that with plyr-functions, then this succeeds:

 da <- laply(a, strsplit, split="")
 da
#---------    
     1   2   3   4  
[1,] "G" "T" "C" "A"
[2,] "G" "A" "C" "A"

And if you wanted a dataframe then use ldply with the same arguments.

1

Using ldply form plyr:

library(plyr)
ldply(strsplit(df$V1,""))
 V1 V2 V3 V4
1  G  T  C  A
2  G  A  C  A
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  • 1
    +1, using fixed=TRUE would speed things up (on bigger data).
    – Arun
    Aug 15, 2013 at 9:08
1

Here's an answer from the qdap package but if you're not already using qdap the base solution would be optimal.

library(qdap)
colSplit(unlist(a), "")

##   X1 X2 X3 X4
## 1  G  T  C  A
## 2  G  A  C  A

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