Data Selection - Basics
Once your dataset is loaded into R, you need to learn how to work with specific parts of it. This means selecting particular rows and columns that you want to focus on. Whether you're cleaning data or analyzing specific trends, being able to subset your data efficiently is essential.
Loading Your Dataset
Before working with any data, it needs to be loaded and viewed:
library(tidyverse) # load the tidyverse package
df <- read_csv("car_details.csv") # read the dataset
View(df) # open the dataset in a spreadsheet-style viewer
Selecting Rows
- Use numeric indexing to select rows by position;
- In R, indexing starts from 1;
- For example,
df[3, ]
selects the third row from the dataset.
df[3, ]
Selecting specific columns
-
Use numeric indexing to select a column by its position;
-
For example,
df[, 5]
selects the fifth column from the dataset; -
Leave the row position blank to select all rows.
df[, 5]
Selecting a column by name
-
Use the
$
operator to access a column by its name; -
This is a quick and readable way to extract a single column;
-
For example,
df$km_driven
selects the column named km_driven.
view(df$km_driven)
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Data Selection - Basics
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Once your dataset is loaded into R, you need to learn how to work with specific parts of it. This means selecting particular rows and columns that you want to focus on. Whether you're cleaning data or analyzing specific trends, being able to subset your data efficiently is essential.
Loading Your Dataset
Before working with any data, it needs to be loaded and viewed:
library(tidyverse) # load the tidyverse package
df <- read_csv("car_details.csv") # read the dataset
View(df) # open the dataset in a spreadsheet-style viewer
Selecting Rows
- Use numeric indexing to select rows by position;
- In R, indexing starts from 1;
- For example,
df[3, ]
selects the third row from the dataset.
df[3, ]
Selecting specific columns
-
Use numeric indexing to select a column by its position;
-
For example,
df[, 5]
selects the fifth column from the dataset; -
Leave the row position blank to select all rows.
df[, 5]
Selecting a column by name
-
Use the
$
operator to access a column by its name; -
This is a quick and readable way to extract a single column;
-
For example,
df$km_driven
selects the column named km_driven.
view(df$km_driven)
¡Gracias por tus comentarios!