Is it possible to create new variable names on the fly?

I'd like to read data frames from a list into new variables with numbers at the end. Something like orca1, orca2, orca3...

If I try something like

paste("orca",i,sep="")=list_name[[i]]

I get this error

target of assignment expands to non-language object

Is there another way around this?

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67% accept rate
As long as we're giving out r-faq tags let's give the link (FAQ 7.21: cran.r-project.org/doc/FAQ/… ) – Ben Bolker May 19 '11 at 14:33
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3 Answers

up vote 14 down vote accepted

Use assign:

 assign(paste("orca",i,sep=""), list_name[[i]])
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It seems to me that you might be better off with a list rather than using orca1, orca2, etc, ... then it would be orca[1], orca[2], ...

Usually you're making a list of variables differentiated by nothing but a number because that number would be a convenient way to access them later.

orca <- list()
orca[[1]] <- "Hi"
orca[[2]] <- 59

Otherwise, assign is just what you want.

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I agree. Usually when people think they want to name variables on the fly, what they really want is a different data structure. – Michael Dunn Apr 21 '10 at 5:55
+1 (FAQ 7.21: cran.r-project.org/doc/FAQ/… ) discusses this nicely – Ben Bolker May 19 '11 at 14:35
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Another tricky solution is to name elements of list and attach it:

list_name = list(
    head(iris),
    head(swiss),
    head(airquality)
    )

names(list_name) <- paste("orca", seq_along(list_name), sep="")
attach(list_name)

orca1
#   Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length Petal.Width Species
# 1          5.1         3.5          1.4         0.2  setosa
# 2          4.9         3.0          1.4         0.2  setosa
# 3          4.7         3.2          1.3         0.2  setosa
# 4          4.6         3.1          1.5         0.2  setosa
# 5          5.0         3.6          1.4         0.2  setosa
# 6          5.4         3.9          1.7         0.4  setosa
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1  
tricky, but not wise. if the answer is attach you're usually asking the wrong question ... – Ben Bolker May 19 '11 at 14:34
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