86

I have a dataframe with numeric entries like this one

test <- data.frame(x = c(26, 21, 20), y = c(34, 29, 28))

How can I get the following vector?

> 26, 34, 21, 29, 20, 28

I was able to get it using the following, but I guess there should be a much more elegant way

X <- test[1, ]
for (i in 2:dim(test)[ 1 ]){
   X <- cbind(X, test[i, ])
   } 

3 Answers 3

165

You can try as.vector(t(test)). Please note that, if you want to do it by columns you should use unlist(test).

4
  • 1
    I can not understand of this workaround. could give some more explanations? @teucer Aug 30, 2016 at 10:21
  • 6
    @verystrongjoe there are two things going on here: 1) t implicitly converts a data.frame to a matrix, 2) a matrix is just a special vector with dim attribute and as.vector or c removes it
    – teucer
    Aug 31, 2016 at 2:25
  • 3
    I had to use as.numeric(t(df))
    – citynorman
    Nov 30, 2016 at 15:53
  • 1
    unlist does not work if columns have different class. See unlist(data.frame(a= 1:10, b= letters[1:10])), for example. I ended up using do.call("c", lapply(data.frame(a= 1:10, b= letters[1:10]), function(i) as.character(i)))
    – user11538509
    Apr 15, 2020 at 11:09
11
c(df$x, df$y)
# returns: 26 21 20 34 29 28

if the particular order is important then:

M = as.matrix(df)
c(m[1,], c[2,], c[3,])
# returns 26 34 21 29 20 28 

Or more generally:

m = as.matrix(df)
q = c()
for (i in seq(1:nrow(m))){
  q = c(q, m[i,])
}

# returns 26 34 21 29 20 28
1
  • 1
    Yes, order does matter, I want convertion by rows. And the rows are many more than 3. So it would be better if you could transform this to a loop or use a vectorized function. Thank you.
    – Brani
    Mar 30, 2010 at 13:04
3

You can try this to get your combination:

as.numeric(rbind(test$x, test$y))

which will return:

26, 34, 21, 29, 20, 28

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