# How to fill matrix with random numbers in R?

expand.grid(i=rexp(5,rate=0.1))


It creates just one col but is there some way to multiply this easily to 5 cols? I mean the matlab-way-of-doing-things like rand('exp', 0.1, 10,20) (creating a matrix with exponentially-distributed-random-numbers with mean 0.1 of size 10x20), how?

-
...why downvotes on this? I like simple stupid questions, one can learn surprising a lot from them idiomatically -- look how many are using slightly different styles, interesting. –  hhh Feb 14 '12 at 18:55
I didn't downvote, but the mouse-over text includes the phrase "does not show any research effort". So I'm guessing someone may have thought that even the most basic research would have turned up the answer to this question. (And IMHO, there is no meaningful difference in the current answers. I was considering deleting mine to reduce clutter.) –  joran Feb 14 '12 at 19:09
I agree -- hard to see how someone found expand.grid before finding matrix and, say, rnorm . Perhaps the OP could have helped by saying something like "I can't find documentation on creating a matrix" to show where the real problem lies. –  Carl Witthoft Feb 14 '12 at 19:39

Use the matrix function:

matrix(rexp(200, rate=.1), ncol=20)


ETA: If you want to do it without repeating the 200, you can define a function to do so:

fill.matrix = function(expr, nrow=1, ncol=1) {
matrix(eval(expr, envir=list(x=nrow*ncol)), nrow=nrow, ncol=ncol)
}

fill.matrix(rexp(x, rate=.1), nrow=10, ncol=20)


The x thus becomes the dummy variable you're talking about. Is that what you're looking for?

-
any idea whether there is some filler-flag for 200? I mean to create the matrix like this matrix(rexp(___, rate=10), ncol=20, nrow=10)? During fast prototyping, I tend to forget just the 200 things --- making clutter/newbie -style mistakes. –  hhh Feb 14 '12 at 19:44
See my edit- I think that's exactly what you want. –  David Robinson Feb 14 '12 at 19:54
Do you mean "there must be some way that Matlab syntax works exactly the same in R"? There isn't. –  David Robinson Feb 14 '12 at 20:00
I'd like to give @DavidRobinson's comment several more upvotes ... –  Ben Bolker Feb 14 '12 at 20:08
I'm glad it's what you're looking for, hhh. But with all respect, your problem is no longer with the language but with the idea that a language could possibly be missing a feature built-in to another language. Often that's simply the case. –  David Robinson Feb 14 '12 at 22:38

you can do something like:

matrix(rexp(200), 10)


And of course use what ever distribution you want.

-
..yes this is handy, used it one time but forgot it immediately -- for some reason, I find it easier to remember the M -style-method because it is much more explicit -- this contains a ton of thing implicitly (and you need to make sure the counts match). –  hhh Feb 14 '12 at 19:32

?matrix will tell you lots! and rexp is the function to generate a random exponential distribution.

mat <- matrix(data = rexp(200, rate = 10), nrow = 10, ncol = 20)

-
...there is something I have never understood here, the term rate -- why it is not 0.1 as mean? Ok, -- with rate ‘rate’ (i.e., mean ‘1/rate’)., this is a part in the manual never understood: does it mean $\mu=\frac{1}{rate}$? Yes, it tells a lot but in an obscure way. Now back to this answer -- is there some way to implicitly rm the 200? It is obvious in the intention of the M -style way of doing things. I mean like this Matrix(mean=0.1, dims=c(20,30), type=c('random', 'exp'))? –  hhh Feb 14 '12 at 19:39
Regarding the parameter of the distribution, I believe it's just nomenclature. R have to choose one! Lots of distributions have more than one nomenclature to its parameters. –  João Daniel Feb 14 '12 at 19:45