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What does Trainsetb over here signify? I don't think it is the list name, but haven't been able to understand what it specifies or what is it's purpose.

> z=as.integer(4,5, 6)
> class(z)
[1] "integer"
> a=list(z)
> class(a)
[1] "list"
> b=list(Trainsetb = z)
> class(b)
[1] "list"
> names(b)
[1] "Trainsetb"
> names(a)
NULL
> a
[[1]]
[1] 4

> b
$Trainsetb
[1] 4
> b$Trainsetb
[1] 4
> Trainsetb
Error: object 'Trainsetb' not found

I am learning data mining using the book. I am using caret package train function. Within train function there is the trainControl argument and it is defined as below:

ctrl <- trainControl(method = "LGOCV",
                     summaryFunction = twoClassSummary,
                     classProbs = TRUE,
                     index = list(TrainSet = pre2008),
                     savePredictions = TRUE)

I want to know why the author hasn't defined index as index = list(pre2008).

1 Answer 1

3

You define what Trainsetb means with b=list(Trainsetb = z). See ?list for details on list syntax: this is an example of defining a list with tag = value.

You can now access the value that corresponds to Trainsetb in the list using b$Trainsetb or b[["Trainsetb"]].

The convenience of accessing this later on is probably why the author used a tag when making the list.

1
  • pre2008 is a vector of integers. There is only one "resample" being used here. In most cases, we would have a set of resamples that are represented by a few different vectors of integers and we need a way to pass in several sets of vectors (which may not have the same length). A list is the most natural way of doing this.
    – topepo
    Sep 2, 2013 at 23:20

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