Box Me
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Here’s a short R function I wrote to turn a long data set into a wide one for viewing. It’s not the most exciting function ever but I find it quite useful when my screen is wide and short. It simply cuts the data set horizontally into equal size pieces and puts them side by side. Lazy I know!
#'boxMe
#'
#'Turns an overly long data frame into something easier to look at
#'
#' @param d A dataframe or matrix
#' @param nrow The number of rows you would like to see in the new dataframe
#' @examples
#' test.set<-data.frame(x=rnorm(100), y=rnorm(100))
#' boxMe(test.set, 18)
#'
#' library(ggplot2)
#' boxMe(diamonds, 10)
boxMe<-function(d, nrow){
# Number of rows and columns
r<-dim(d)[1]
c<-dim(d)[2]
rem<-r %% nrow # Number of blank rows
reps<-floor(r/nrow) # Number of folds
s<-seq(1, reps*nrow, by=nrow) # Breaks
box<-d[1:nrow,] # First col
for (i in s[-1]){
ap<-d[i:(i+nrow-1),]
box<-cbind(box, ap)
}
#Append remainder
if (rem>0){
n.null.rows<-nrow-rem
rem.rows<-d[(reps*nrow+1):r,]
null.block<-as.data.frame(matrix(rep(NA, (n.null.rows*c)), nrow=n.null.rows))
names(null.block)<-names(rem.rows)
last.block<-rbind(rem.rows, null.block)
box<-cbind(box, last.block)
}
return(box)
}
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