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I have a two dimensional list called mylist.

I could access the dimensions like so:

mylist[[a]][[b]]
Where a ranges from 1 to 8 and b ranges from 1 to 4. All 8*4=32 entries are matrices of the same dimension.

I want to sum up all list over one dimension. Currently I use:

mylist[[1]][[1]] + mylist[[2]][[1]] + mylist[[3]][[1]] + ... + mylist[[8]][[1]]
mylist[[1]][[2]] + mylist[[2]][[2]] + mylist[[3]][[2]] + ... + mylist[[8]][[2]] mylist[[1]][[3]] + mylist[[2]][[3]] + mylist[[3]][[3]] + ... + mylist[[8]][[3]] mylist[[1]][[4]] + mylist[[2]][[4]] + mylist[[3]][[4]] + ... + mylist[[8]][[4]]

Is there a way to do that within one line of code? This is important for me now because the lengths become variable and are not restricted to 4 and 8 any more. I guess I need something like this:

mylist_oneDimensional <- sum_list(mylist, dimension=1)

1 Answer 1

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Based on what you described as sum_list, it can be done like this

sum_list <- function(mylist, dimension=1){
  Reduce('+',lapply(1:length(mylist), function(i) mylist[[i]][[dimension]]))
}

For dimension = 1, calling sum_list(mylist, 1) will correspond to

mylist[[1]][[1]] + mylist[[2]][[1]] + mylist[[3]][[1]] + ... + mylist[[8]][[1]]

And sum_list(mylist, 2) to

mylist[[1]][[2]] + mylist[[2]][[2]] + mylist[[3]][[2]] + ... + mylist[[8]][[2]]

And so on depending in dimension value.

And then to get a list of all resulting sums, just use lapply again.

lapply(1:length(mylist[[1]]), function (i) sum_list(mylist, i))

This will only work correctly if mylist[[1]], mylist[[2]], ...., mylist[[n]] have same length.

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  • Thank you very much romantsegelskyi. That was what I was looking for. I wonder I bit why that works since Reduce expects a VECTOR. But the output of lapply is a LIST.
    – Bernd
    Apr 2, 2014 at 7:19
  • @BerndMeyer Technically lists are vectors. More info in this question - stackoverflow.com/questions/8594814/…. Also, if the answer is good enough, please accept it :)
    – romants
    Apr 2, 2014 at 12:24

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