8

i have the following data frame

    dd <- data.frame(b = c("High", "Medium", "Highest", "Low", "Not bad","Good", "V. Good"),
   x = c("C3", "C1", "C4", "N2", "C2", "N1","N4"), x = c("5", "2", "3", "6", "7", "5","7") )

so i want the data frame to be transformed using a manual order for the variable X.

for example: that's the original one

1    High C3   5
2  Medium C1   2
3 Highest C4   3
4     Low N2   6
5 Not bad C2   7
6    Good N1   5
7 V. Good N4   7

but what i want is a new data frame to begin based on the value of X but not alphabetically, but randomly in an order which i chose e.g:

the first row has x=C1, the second have x=C2, the third have x=N4, ...etc

how this can be done??

thank you

2
  • Does your data.frame really only have 7 rows? If so, why not just create it in the correct order in the first place? Alternatively, to reorder, use dd[c(2, 5, 7, etc), ], where 2, 5, 7, and so on, are the row numbers in the order that you desire.
    – jbaums
    Feb 22, 2012 at 9:15
  • 1
    @jbaums: no it's not, but that's a part of it and all the the rest is the same part for the X Variable but the other variable are different. so i want to apply this for all the data frame based on their X value
    – ifreak
    Feb 22, 2012 at 9:52

2 Answers 2

16

Since the x column is a factor, you can simply ensure that its levels are in the order you want.

# New sorting order
desired_order <- sample(levels(dd$x))
# Re-order the levels
dd$x <- factor( as.character(dd$x), levels=desired_order )
# Re-order the data.frame
dd <- dd[order(dd$x),]
6
  • i did not get how i can assign the order i want??
    – ifreak
    Feb 22, 2012 at 11:23
  • 1
    You should specify the desired order in the desired_order variable (without duplicates). In the example, I just used a random order, but you can specify it by hand, e.g., desired_order <- c("C1", "C2", "N4", "C4", "N1", "N2", "C3"). Feb 22, 2012 at 12:19
  • but this will work for the whole data frame(including sub-data frames of the same type)??
    – ifreak
    Feb 22, 2012 at 13:38
  • Yes, this will work for the whole data.frame. I am not sure what you mean by "sub-data.frame". Feb 22, 2012 at 13:49
  • ok, it worked now. thank you. but there is still one small problem, the data frame is ordered as i want but when i plot it the ordering changes, why?? and how can i fix this??
    – ifreak
    Feb 23, 2012 at 14:29
1

If your data.frame really is small enough to manually reorder, then just make a vector of the numbers 1:7, ordered in the way that the rows should appear. e.g.:

    dd[c(2,5,7,1,4,3,6),]

    b  x x.1
    2  Medium C1   2
    5 Not bad C2   7
    7 V. Good N4   7
    1    High C3   5
    4     Low N2   6
    3 Highest C4   3
    6    Good N1   5

Or, if you really want to do it with a character vector, you can also reference by row names, like this:

    rownames(dd) <- as.character(dd$x)
    dd[c("C1","C2","N4","C3","N2","C4","N1"),]

    b  x x.1
    C1  Medium C1   2
    C2 Not bad C2   7
    N4 V. Good N4   7
    C3    High C3   5
    N2     Low N2   6
    C4 Highest C4   3
    N1    Good N1   5
1
  • it's not that small, but that's a part of it and all the the rest is the same part for the X Variable but the other variable are different values. so i want to apply this for all the data frame based on their X value(but also i would consider each one as a small data frame and apply this ordering to it)
    – ifreak
    Feb 22, 2012 at 9:58

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