I'm working on a PHP web app that calls R through curl and RApache. Most things work fine. But one lattice plot throws this error:

RApache Warning/Error!!!Error in uy + c(-1, 1) : non-numeric argument to binary operator

I tried saving the data structures that feed into the plot and doing the plot in my local R, but then the plot works just fine. So I can't replicate the error.

These are the loaded libraries when the script runs in RApache:

library(Brew)
library(Cairo)
library(rjson)
library(DBI)
library(RMySQL)
library(reshape)
library(plyr)
library('RColorBrewer')
library(ggplot2)
library(lattice)
library(latticeExtra)
library(hexbin)

Here is a bit of the script:

colgrad.pal<-colorRampPalette(brewer.pal(11,'Spectral'), interpolate='spline')

//problem plot
dists.med.lplot<-levelplot(value~starttime+groupname|dists, data=MDist.median,
  col.regions=rev(colgrad.pal(200)),colorkey=list(col=rev(colgrad.pal(200))),
  xlab='Time(s)',ylab='Treatment',
  main='Level Plot of Median Distance',
  layout=c(1,3))

And here is a link to a datafile. I read it in like this: //link appears untrustworthy, so removed

Data looks like this:

'data.frame':   2880 obs. of  6 variables:
 $ groupname: Factor w/ 8 levels "rowA","rowB",..: 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ...
 $ fCycle   : Factor w/ 6 levels "Cycle 1","Cycle 2",..: 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 ...
 $ fPhase   : Factor w/ 2 levels "Dark","Light": 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ...
 $ starttime: int  0 60 120 180 240 300 360 420 480 540 ...
 $ dists    : Factor w/ 3 levels "inadist","lardist",..: 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ...
 $ value    : num  47.5 64 78.3 39.2 53.7 ...

Any ideas on what the problem is or how to better troubleshoot this?

ETA version/platform info

        [platform] => sparc-sun-solaris2.10
        [arch] => sparc
        [os] => solaris2.10
        [system] => sparc, solaris2.10
        [status] => 
        [major] => 2
        [minor] => 10.1
        [year] => 2009
        [month] => 12
        [day] => 14
        [svn rev] => 50720
        [language] => R
        [version.string] => R version 2.10.1 (2009-12-14)
link|improve this question

What version(s) of R, RApache, and what OS are you using? – Joshua Ulrich Oct 18 '10 at 18:20
@Joshua Ulrich: R version 2.10.1, probably RApache 1.1.9 (no dates on the distro, but it was the most recent at the end of this July), OS Solaris2.10 – dnagirl Oct 18 '10 at 18:47
could you get a traceback of the error somehow? On a sidenote, the safety report of Norton on your link is rather worrying... safeweb.norton.com/report/show?url=filebin.ca Don't know if it's a real risk in your file or just a general idea they have from the site, but it's worth looking at. – Joris Meys Oct 18 '10 at 19:41
@Joris Meys: that's disturbing about the file. My local version is just a .csv and doesn't raise any alarms. I will look for another file dump site, and remove the offending link. – dnagirl Oct 18 '10 at 19:47
1  
I check the file itself, and your file doesn't give anything. Hence, problem is the site. I checked a bit further, and apparently it's a problem with malicious files hosted somewhere else on filebin.ca. FWIW, I use dropbox (www.dropbox.com) for file sharing (among other things). Tried a lot of ways, but after setting this up I never looked for anything else again. It's worth a try. – Joris Meys Oct 18 '10 at 20:14
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1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

The error smells of an issue with your data. I would try the following:

  • before the actual call to plot() et al, save all your (relevant) data via save(x, y, z, ..., file="/tmp/dbg.RData")
  • then load all the relevant data from the saved file in a 'normal' R session and inspect and compare
  • this should allow you to pinpoint a data issue that you may then be able to circumvent with more sanity checks etc to prevent your actual code from falling over.
link|improve this answer
That's excellent advice. I had 'saved' the data with write.table(MDist.median ,file=fn,row.names=F). The file produced by write.table() gives no errors when processed in 'normal' R. But using the save() method reproduces the error exactly. Strange thing is, the resulting data frames look the same to me. – dnagirl Oct 18 '10 at 19:24
1  
It appears that the save()d data.frame did not consider the first column a factor, but the write.table()d data.frame did. So I changed the code to explicitly set the factors for my data.frame and now everything works! – dnagirl Oct 18 '10 at 20:09
Sweet. Glad to have been of help. – Dirk Eddelbuettel Oct 18 '10 at 20:10
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