2

First, this is a very basic question that I'm unsure of how to phrase. If the question is a duplicate (though I checked using what I thought might be appropriate phrasing), I'll obviously retract and appreciate the link.

Second, I am sure there is an easier way to do what I'm trying, but don't want to get off-track.

OK. I'm attempting to just get a table of column proportions from a matrix of 0/1's (the proportion of 1's conditional on a value of another variable, which is PARTY in this case).

my data.frame is m103, and of dimensions (437,91) and the following process works (as in, produces what I want):

prop.table(as.matrix(ddply(m103, .(PARTY), sum, na.rm=T)))

But of course, I want to actually keep the output, and this is where the error arises. If I do this:

a <- prop.table(as.matrix(ddply(m103, .(PARTY), sum, na.rm=T)))

Things are great. But IMMEDIATELY after this, if I try:

m103.avg.prop <- prop.table(as.matrix(ddply(m103, .(PARTY), sum, na.rm=T)))

I get the error:

Error in FUN(X[[2L]], ...) : only defined on a data frame with all numeric variables

I'd like to keep a rational naming scheme going in my code (which the second example would continue), but I can't tell if this has something to do with what I've tried to assign the output to, or something else.

Many thanks!

EDIT: Let's see if I can be more explicit

#Data import
m103 <- read.csv("103_members_party.csv", header=T)
#See the first few rows/columns
m103[1:5,1:5]
#Produces this: 
     ID PARTY X930 X461 X137
1 15245   100    0    0    0
2 15000   100    0    0    0
3 29108   200    0    0    0
4 15001   100    0    0    0
5 29132   100    0    0    0
#Sum and get col percentages by PARTY (sums the 1's when PARTY==100, PARTY==200, etc)
#WITHOUT assigning to anything
prop.table(as.matrix(ddply(m103, .(PARTY), sum, na.rm=T)))
#Produces: 
            PARTY          V1
[1,] 1.122515e-05 0.580000465
[2,] 2.245030e-05 0.416619418
[3,] 3.681849e-05 0.003309623
#With assignment to a
a <- prop.table(as.matrix(ddply(m103, .(PARTY), sum, na.rm=T)))
a
#Produces
            PARTY          V1
[1,] 1.122515e-05 0.580000465
[2,] 2.245030e-05 0.416619418
[3,] 3.681849e-05 0.003309623
#Now, assignment to m103.avg.prop
m103.avg.prop <- prop.table(as.matrix(ddply(m103, .(PARTY), sum, na.rm=T)))
#results in error: 
Error in FUN(X[[2L]], ...) : 
  only defined on a data frame with all numeric variables

1 Answer 1

2

The error you're getting is because you're trying to sum something that isn't a number. Without reproducible code I can't tell you exactly what is going on. But, one of the reasons we ask for a reproducible example is that in the process of making one, you will often discover the problem on your own.

In this case, I assume the data came from somewhere like excel, which is notorious for doing surprising things to data. try looking at str(m103) and one of the column will be a character vector rather than numeric. faulting that, i would have to see your data.

However, there should be no difference between your assignment to a and your assignment to m103.avg.prop. As a side note, I like to avoid numbers in my variable names wherever possible, just to avoid confusing myself!

EDIT: Add runable code:

> m103<-data.frame(ID=c(15245, 15000, 29108, 15001, 29132),PARTY=c(100, 100, 200, 100, 100),X930=c(0, 0, 1, 0, 0),X461=c(0, 0, 0, 1, 1),X137=c(1, 1, 1, 1, 1))
> m103
     ID PARTY X930 X461 X137
1 15245   100    0    0    1
2 15000   100    0    0    1
3 29108   200    1    0    1
4 15001   100    0    1    1
5 29132   100    0    1    1

> prop.table(as.matrix(ddply(m103, .(PARTY), sum, na.rm=T)))
            PARTY        V1
[1,] 0.0009579095 0.7163630
[2,] 0.0019158189 0.2807633
> a <- prop.table(as.matrix(ddply(m103, .(PARTY), sum, na.rm=T)))
> m103.avg.prop <- prop.table(as.matrix(ddply(m103, .(PARTY), sum, na.rm=T)))
> a
            PARTY        V1
[1,] 0.0009579095 0.7163630
[2,] 0.0019158189 0.2807633
> m103.avg.prop
            PARTY        V1
[1,] 0.0009579095 0.7163630
[2,] 0.0019158189 0.2807633
> 

I still cannot replicate your problem. Like I said above, the output of str(m103) and the output of str(a) will be informative. Also, sessionInfo(). Short of that, I'll stick with my previous guesses...

3
  • Appreciate the advice. I generally agree on the numbering for variables, but I'm dealing with data on Congresses, which are generally given by numbers, so I need to keep them distinct. I guess what I don't understand is why it would all work up to the point where I assign to a, but not in the case of assigning to something else. The summing something that isn't a number would, I would think, show up in the first case as well as the second. Feb 16, 2012 at 16:18
  • @SavageHenry You're right, it should! but when I try to execute your code with made up data, it errors for me on the first step, since I assumed PARTY is a character vector rather than numeric.
    – Justin
    Feb 16, 2012 at 16:24
  • Awesome. Many thanks. I'll take a look at the output. Very helpful to know how best to go about error checking. Feb 16, 2012 at 17:22

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.