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I am trying to create a subset of the rows that have a value of 1 for variable A, and a value of 1 for at least one of the following variables: B, C, or D.

Subset1 <-  subset(Data,
              Data$A==1 &
                Data$B ==1  ||
                Data$C ==1 |
                Data$D == 1,
              select= A)
Subset1

The problem is that the code above returns some rows that have A=0 and I am not sure why.

To troublehsoot:

  1. I know that && and || are the long forms or and and or which vectorizes it. I have run this code several times using &&, ||,& and | in different places. Nothing returns what I am looking for exactly.

  2. When I shorten the code, it works fine and I subset only the rows that I would expect:

Subset1 <- subset(Data, Data$A==1 & Data$B==0, select= A)

Subset1

Unfortunately, this doesn't suffice since I also need to capture rows whose C or D value = 1. Can anyone explain why my first code block is not subsetting what I am expecting it to?

2 Answers 2

3

You can use parens to be more specific about what your & is referring to. Otherwise (as @Patrick Trentin clarified) your logical operators are combined according to operator precedence (within the same level of precedence they are evaluated from left to right).

Example:

> FALSE & TRUE | TRUE #equivalent to (FALSE & TRUE) | TRUE
[1] TRUE
> FALSE & (TRUE | TRUE)
[1] FALSE

So in your case you can try something like below (assuming you want items that A == 1 & that meet one of the other conditions):

Data$A==1 & (Data$B==1 | Data$C==1 | Data$D==1)
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    "Otherwise the bools will be combined from left to right" nope, logical operators are combined according to operator precedence first, and only within the same level of precedence they are evaluated from left to right. In R, & and && have higher priority than | and || according to this manual. Jun 12, 2017 at 10:49
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    @PatrickTrentin thanks for the info and source. I'll make an edit once I get to a computer to avoid misinforming any future readers Jun 12, 2017 at 10:52
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Since you didn't provide the data you're working with, I've replicated some here.

set.seed(20)
Data = data.frame(A = sample(0:1, 10, replace=TRUE),
                  B = sample(0:1, 10, replace=TRUE),
                  C = sample(0:1, 10, replace=TRUE),
                  D = sample(0:1, 10, replace=TRUE))

If you use parenthesis, which can evaluate to a logical function, you can achieve what you're looking for.

Subset1 <- subset(Data,
                  Data$A==1 &
                    (Data$B == 1 |
                    Data$C == 1 |
                    Data$D ==1),
                  select=A)
Subset1
  A
1 1
2 1
4 1
5 1
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