[R] beginner's problem in displaying large data

Spencer Graves spencer.graves at pdf.com
Wed Nov 17 19:39:38 CET 2004


	  Are you sure you are only getting the last 5 columns, rows 1723:2200? 
  There isn't a scroll bar some place?

	  What do you get from the following?

      (tst <- data.frame(array(rnorm(500), dim=c(500, 6))))

	  This should come in 2 sets of 500 rows, the first with 5 columns, the 
second with only 1.  If what you said earlier is accurate, I would guess 
that when this is done, the screen would display rows 23:500 of column 
6.  Is this what you get?

	  If you still have troubles, check "?sink", pipe the output to a text 
file file, and look at the file with some other application, e.g.:

	  sink("huh.txt")
	  (tst <- data.frame(array(rnorm(500), dim=c(500, 6))))
	  sink()

	  hope this helps.
	  spencer graves

Terry Mu wrote:

 >Dear Spencer,
 >
 >Thank you for your comment.
 >
 >>     1.  Did you try "dim(sample.data)"?  Is it actually 2200 by 15?
 >>Or are you reading in just some subset of the data?  If it is 2200 by
 >>15, could you also please do "class(sample.data)"?
 >
 >
 >Yes, dim() gives the number.
 >class(sample.data) gives "data.frame"
 >
 >
 >>     2.  I just got a full listing from the following:
 >>
 >>     (tst <- data.frame(array(rnorm(2200), dim=c(2200, 15))))
 >>
 >>     You might try this.  With R 2.0.0patched under Windows 2000, I got
 >>rows 1:2200 flying by 3 times, each with 5 columns.
 >
 >
 >I tried this, did not get full listing. What I got was last 5 columns
 >from 1723. I am using R 2.0.0 under Windows 2000.
 >
 >
 >>     3.  Have you considered doing plots (including qqnorm) of numeric
 >>variables and tables of character variables?  These can often reveal
 >>problems I might never see in a simple scan of numbers.
 >
 >
 >They are all numbers.
 >
 >>     4.  "PLEASE do read the posting guide!
 >>http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html".  At minimum, please tell
 >>us which version of R under which operating system, and specifically
 >>what you did to get it into R and how you know it's 2200 by 15.
 >
 >
 >Sorry about that.
 >
 >Thanks,
 >Terry Mu
 >
 >
 >>Terry Mu wrote:
 >>
 >>>I got a sample data (let's call it sample.data), which is about 2200 
by 15.
 >>>
 >>>I tried to take a look of all data
 >>>
 >>>
 >>>
 >>>>sample.data
 >>>>
 >>>>
 >>>It shows only a part of data that I thought was a corner. It does not
 >>>really affect my job, but I thought it is nice to have a look of all
 >>>data. I can see individual records and they are fine.
 >>>
 >>>Is this normal because of buffer size or some reasons? Can I use other
 >>>commands or change some settings to display all data?
 >>>
 >>>Thanks,
 >>>Terry
 >>>
 >>>______________________________________________
 >>>R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list
 >>>https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
 >>>PLEASE do read the posting guide! 
http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
 >>>
 >>>
 >>--
 >>Spencer Graves, PhD, Senior Development Engineer
 >>O:  (408)938-4420;  mobile:  (408)655-4567
 >>
 >>

-- 
Spencer Graves, PhD, Senior Development Engineer
O:  (408)938-4420;  mobile:  (408)655-4567




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