1

I have a data frame, df like this...df = data.frame(w = c('CT','CT','CT','CT','CT','CT'), x = c('PF','PF','MF','MF','AF','AF'), y = sample(letters, 6), z = seq(1:6)) It is already grouped by w and y. I want to make a new grouping by x, but only if x = PF or MF. I need to keep y if x = AF, otherwise NA or some other unique number would be ok. The summarize function would be the sum of z so the final data frame would be...

w  x  y  z 
CT PF NA 3
CT MF NA 7
CT AF s 5
CT AF h 6

I am using dplyr and tried to group_by (Flyway %in% c('MF','PF')) but that only gets a new column with TRUE/FALSE. Maybe I should be looking outside dplyr? Thanks.

2 Answers 2

3

You could change y first, then group the data and compute the sum of z:

df %>% 
  ungroup %>% 
  mutate(y = replace(y, x != "AF", NA)) %>% 
  group_by(w, x, y) %>% 
  summarise(z = sum(z)) %>% 
  ungroup()
#Source: local data frame [4 x 4]
#
#       w      x      y     z
#  (fctr) (fctr) (fctr) (int)
#1     CT     AF      h     5
#2     CT     AF      l     6
#3     CT     MF     NA     7
#4     CT     PF     NA     3

Or a little shorter

df %>% 
  group_by(w, x, y = replace(y, x != "AF", NA)) %>% 
  summarise(z = sum(z)) %>% 
  ungroup()
1
  • Thanks. I figured it would be fairly simple but have never modified a grouping variable. This will be really useful in the future!
    – tjr
    Dec 21, 2015 at 21:48
1

We could also use data.table. Convert the 'data.frame' to 'data.table' (setDT(df)), for values in 'x' that are not 'AF', assign (:=) the 'y' to 'NA', grouped by 'w', 'x', and 'y', we get the sum of 'z'.

library(data.table)
setDT(df)[x!='AF', y:=NA_character_][,list(z=sum(z)) ,.(w,x,y)]
#    w  x  y z
#1: CT PF NA 3
#2: CT MF NA 7
#3: CT AF  b 5
#4: CT AF  o 6

NOTE: The different values in 'y' column is due to not setting the seed while constructing the dataset.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.