39

I have a dataframe with a bunch of columns that I need to convert to the numeric type. I have written the following code to try to do this, however it is saying the replacement has 0 rows.

instanceconvert <- colnames(regmodel[7:262])

for (i in instanceconvert)
{
  regmodel$i <- as.numeric(regmodel$i)
}

Any help would be appreciated.

3
  • The reason this is not working is that you are telling R to look for an object named i inside of regmodel. Inside your loop, i is the column itself, not the name of the column anyway.
    – Señor O
    Oct 2, 2013 at 20:40
  • And don't forget 8.2.1 in the R Inferno: www.burns-stat.com/pages/Tutor/R_inferno.pdf
    – Henrik
    Oct 2, 2013 at 20:42
  • 1
    See also stackoverflow.com/a/12727871/636656 Oct 2, 2013 at 20:51

7 Answers 7

62

You can use sapply for this:

dat <- sapply( dat, as.numeric )

If not every column needs converting:

library( taRifx )
dat <- japply( dat, which(sapply(dat, class)=="character"), as.numeric )
1
  • 16
    It may be useful to note that the class of dat is now matrix. dat <- as.data.frame(sapply(dat, as.numeric) allows for easier replacement.
    – Robert Yi
    Dec 22, 2017 at 19:29
12

Combining the answer by @Andrii with the comment by @RobertYi, my short suggestion is

df[] <- sapply(df, as.numeric)

This ensures that the result stays a data frame and preserves column names (thanks, @krassowski).

1
  • 4
    It also preserves row names (while the most upvoted answer does not).
    – krassowski
    Apr 4, 2022 at 14:28
9

Here is quick solution from other question:

df[] <- lapply(df, function(x) as.numeric(as.character(x)))

Reference: Change all columns from factor to numeric in R

2
  • What is the advantage of casting to character first and only then casting to numeric?
    – bers
    May 19, 2022 at 5:27
  • 2
    @bers: Factors are sometimes converted to weird numbers otherwise.
    – gaspar
    May 26, 2022 at 9:12
5

As SenorO pointed out, the reason your original code does not work is that $i will not evaluate i to find out it's current value. You should instead access and assign to the column using double brackets, which work when i is a name or index number:

for (i in instanceconvert)
{
  regmodel[[i]] <- as.numeric(regmodel[[i]])
}

Following Ari's approach, you can get rid of the loop:

regmodel[,instanceconvert] <- 
    lapply(regmodel[,instanceconvert,drop=FALSE],as.numeric)

You could also do this with your range, 7:262, in place of "instanceconvert", since you can access/assign by name or column number.

3

A fast a dirty way to do it, especially if you have variables all over that need converting, which would mean a lot of conversion code is to write the file out and read it back in again using something like write.csv/read.csv

write.csv(regmodel, file="regmodel.csv")
read.csv(file="regmodel.csv")
3

Just pass the columns you want as a data frame d into the following:

data.frame(apply(d, 2, as.numeric))

This goes column by column and converts each into a numeric. Then just change your row-names and column-names accordingly.

1

Along with all of these approaches, if you have character/numeric/date type columns and want to convert (type of) them according to their value, the following may be useful:

type.convert(df, as.is = TRUE)

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