3

I'm using grep to replace "Mr" and "Mrs" with "Mr." and "Mrs.", but whenever I enter

gsub("Mr", "Mr.", data$Title)

it also causes all of the "Mrs" to turn into "Mr.s", which is not exactly what I'm looking for :P

gsub("Mr\s", "Mr." data$Title)

doesn't work either, as R (I think) doesn't recognize that space after the Mr.

Thanks in advance for any help!

1
  • 6
    In R you need to escape things twice, once for R and once for the regular expression. gsub('Mr\\s', 'Mr. ', data$Title) or gsub('Mr ', 'Mr. ', data$Title).
    – Justin
    Jun 14, 2013 at 15:11

4 Answers 4

7
gsub("(Mrs?)", "\\1.", c("Mr Smith", "Mrs Smith"))
#[1] "Mr. Smith"  "Mrs. Smith"
1
  • Great solution, and works for when there's no space after the title (like OP wanted). Jun 14, 2013 at 15:40
3
> gsub("Mr([^s])", "Mr.\\1", c("Mr fdfvgg", "Mrs FLkm"))
[1] "Mr. fdfvgg" "Mrs FLkm"
2
  • It does work, but the issue with that is my "Mr" doesn't have a space after it. It's more like Mrfdfvgg and MrsFLkm.
    – Wilson Z
    Jun 14, 2013 at 15:21
  • [^s] means match any character which is not an s. It doesnt mean a space. @eddi answer is the way to go. Jun 14, 2013 at 16:09
0

I think eddi's answer is better, but here is an alternate way to get "Mr" without getting "Mrs":

gsub("Mr\\b", "Mr.", c("Mr", "Mrs"))

[1] "Mr." "Mrs"

The \\b indicates a word boundary.

-2

**You can simply run a loop on R directly by checking the length of data$Title


if the length==2 => data$Title[i]<-"Mr." else data$Title[i]<-"Mrs."**

1
  • 1
    -1 Not formatted, no explanation of what you're looping over, and I'm pretty sure you mean nchar not length.
    – Thomas
    Jun 14, 2013 at 18:19

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.