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A categorical variable V1 in a data frame D1 can have values represented by the letters from A to Z. I want to create a subset D2, which excludes some values, say, B, N and T. Basically, I want a command which is the opposite of %in%

D2 = subset(D1, V1 %in% c("B", "N", "T"))
2

13 Answers 13

484
Answer recommended by R Language Collective

You can use the ! operator to basically make any TRUE FALSE and every FALSE TRUE. so:

D2 = subset(D1, !(V1 %in% c('B','N','T')))

EDIT: You can also make an operator yourself:

'%!in%' <- function(x,y)!('%in%'(x,y))

c(1,3,11)%!in%1:10
[1] FALSE FALSE  TRUE
7
  • 5
    The use of second option is illustrated in the help(match) page (where you would get to if you typed ?"%in%" ) where the new operator is called %w/o%.
    – IRTFM
    Apr 29, 2011 at 12:50
  • 40
    also, see ?Negate e.g. "%ni%" <- Negate("%in%")
    – baptiste
    Jun 11, 2011 at 6:09
  • 2
    Negate worked for me when used after defining the new operator, as suggested by baptiste, e.g. subset(df, variable %ni% c("A", "B")) , but not when used directly, e.g. subset(df, variable Negate("%in%") c("A", "B"))
    – PatrickT
    Oct 27, 2015 at 9:20
  • 4
    @PatrickT that’s because only operators can be used as operators. and operators are either built-in or start and end with %. To create an operator, you need to assign a function with two operands to a name starting and ending with %. Mar 15, 2019 at 16:41
  • 5
    We can also use filter(!(V1%in% c('B','N','T'))).
    – ah bon
    Jan 29, 2021 at 2:20
109

How about:

`%ni%` <- Negate(`%in%`)
c(1,3,11) %ni% 1:10
# [1] FALSE FALSE  TRUE
4
  • this one actually doesn't work as it throws an error something about SPECIAL %ni Apr 30, 2021 at 13:34
  • Still works just fine. R version 4.0.3 (2020-10-10) Platform: x86_64-apple-darwin17.0 (64-bit) Running under: macOS Big Sur 10.16 Apr 30, 2021 at 20:07
  • 5
    its becuase ' is not `, and you should use the ` Apr 30, 2021 at 22:36
  • The changes have been made. Thanks. Nov 10, 2021 at 2:51
60

Here is a version using filter in dplyr that applies the same technique as the accepted answer by negating the logical with !:

D2 <- D1 %>% dplyr::filter(!V1 %in% c('B','N','T'))
0
36

If you look at the code of %in%

 function (x, table) match(x, table, nomatch = 0L) > 0L

then you should be able to write your version of opposite. I use

`%not in%` <- function (x, table) is.na(match(x, table, nomatch=NA_integer_))

Another way is:

function (x, table) match(x, table, nomatch = 0L) == 0L
0
17

Using negate from purrr also does the trick quickly and neatly:

`%not_in%` <- purrr::negate(`%in%`)

Then usage is, for example,

c("cat", "dog") %not_in% c("dog", "mouse")
1
9

purrr::compose() is another quick way to define this for later use, as in:

`%!in%` <- compose(`!`, `%in%`)
6

Another solution could be using setdiff

D1 = c("A",..., "Z") ; D0 = c("B","N","T")

D2 = setdiff(D1, D0)

D2 is your desired subset.

1
  • Sometimes it can be useful but it doesn't produce the same results if the are repetitions.
    – skan
    Oct 12, 2020 at 15:38
3

Hmisc has %nin% function, which should do this.

https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/Hmisc/versions/4.4-0/topics/%25nin%25

3
library(roperators)

1 %ni% 2:10

If you frequently need to use custom infix operators, it is easier to just have them in a package rather than declaring the same exact functions over and over in each script or project.

1
  • While this may be a correct answer, it would be more useful with additional explanation of why it works. Consider editing it to include further details, and if you feel it's better than the accepted answer which was posted nearly a decade ago. May 7, 2020 at 1:22
1

The package has it built in: %!in%.

0

The help for %in%, help("%in%"), includes, in the Examples section, this definition of not in,

"%w/o%" <- function(x, y) x[!x %in% y] #-- x without y

Lets try it:

c(2,3,4) %w/o% c(2,8,9)
[1] 3 4

Alternatively

"%w/o%" <- function(x, y) !x %in% y #--  x without y
c(2,3,4) %w/o% c(2,8,9)
# [1] FALSE  TRUE  TRUE
0
require(TSDT)

c(1,3,11) %nin% 1:10
# [1] FALSE FALSE  TRUE

For more information, you can refer to: https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/TSDT/TSDT.pdf

-2

In Frank Harrell's package of R utility functions, he has a %nin% (not in) which does exactly what the original question asked. No need for wheel reinvention.

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