11

I have the following data.frame:

set.seed(126)
df <- data.frame(a=sample(c(1:100, NA), 10), b=sample(1:100, 10), c=sample(1:100, 10), d = c(1:10))
    a  b  c  d
1  18 27 53  1
2  44 16 66  2
3  58 47  3  3
...

And the following lookup table:

varnames <- data.frame(old = c("a", "b", "c"), new = c("dog", "cat", "mouse"))
  old   new
1   a   dog
2   b   cat
3   c mouse

What I am trying to do is replace the names(df) with the corresponding varnames$new... If a names(df) is not in varnames$old, then retain the colname in df...

The resulting data.frame I would like returned would look like this:

   dog cat mouse  d
1   57  10    83  1
2   53  99    94  2
3   99  60    39  3
...

2 Answers 2

14

How about using the match() function

mm <- match(names(df), varnames$old)
names(df)[!is.na(mm)] <- as.character(varnames$new[na.omit(mm)])
head(df)
#   dog cat mouse d
# 1  65  48    19 1
# 2  46  15    80 2
# 3  NA  47    84 3
# 4  68  34    46 4
# 5  23  75    42 5
# 6  92  87    68 6

If you are interested, you could also use the dplyr rename() function

library(dplyr)
df %>% rename_(.dots=with(varnames, setNames(as.list(as.character(old)), new)))

Or one more option, the data.table package has a setnames function

library(data.table)
setnames(df, as.character(varnames$old), as.character(varnames$new))
3
  • 1
    I think in case that varnames never has column names that aren't present in df (just like you assumed in your setnames implementation, otherwise it won't work), you could simplify your first two lines to just names(df)[match(varnames$old, names(df))] <- as.character(varnames$new). Nice implementation of setnames btw. Jun 4, 2015 at 21:12
  • @DavidArenburg actually the data.table version of setnames doesn't assume all values are present in the replacement vector. All the above methods should be equivalent as written.
    – MrFlick
    Jun 4, 2015 at 21:31
  • What I meant is that if you will change varnames to let say varnames <- data.frame(old = c("l", "b", "c"), new = c("dog", "cat", "mouse")), your base R approach will still work as expected, while setnames will fail. Jun 4, 2015 at 21:34
2

One more option is mapvalues() from the plyr package:

library(plyr)
names(df) <- mapvalues(names(df),
                             from = varnames$old,
                             to = as.character(varnames$new))

If you are using the dplyr package, you can call this with plyr::mapvalues() so you don't have to load plyr on top of dplyr (which causes problems).

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