[R] Randomly remove condition-selected rows from a matrix
Wacek Kusnierczyk
Waclaw.Marcin.Kusnierczyk at idi.ntnu.no
Fri Jan 2 16:07:01 CET 2009
Stavros Macrakis wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 31, 2008 at 12:44 PM, Guillaume Chapron
> <carnivorescience at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>> m[-sample(which(m[,1]<8 & m[,2]>12),2),]
>>>
>> Supposing I sample only one row among the ones matching my criteria. Then
>> consider the case where there is just one row matching this criteria. Sure,
>> there is no need to sample, but the instruction would still be executed.
>> Then if this row index is 15, my instruction becomes which(15,1), and this
>> can gives me any row from 1 to 15, which is not correct. I have to make a
>> condition in case there is only one row matching the criteria.
>>
>
> Yes, this is a (documented!) design flaw in 'sample' -- see the man page.
>
> For some reason, the designers of R have chosen to document the flaw
> and leave it up to individual users to work around it rather than fix
> it definitively. A related case is sample(c(),0), which gives an
> error rather than giving an empty vector, though in general R deals
> with empty vectors correctly (e.g. sum(c()) => 0).
>
>
interestingly, ?sample says:
"
'sample' takes a sample of the specified size from the elements of
'x' using either with or without replacement.
x: Either a (numeric, complex, character or logical) vector of
more than one element from which to choose, or a positive
integer.
If 'x' has length 1, is numeric (in the sense of 'is.numeric') and
'x >= 1', sampling takes place from '1:x'. _Note_ that this
convenience feature may lead to undesired behaviour when 'x' is of
varying length 'sample(x)'. See the 'resample()' example below.
"
yet the following works, even though x has length 1 and is *not* numeric:
x = "foolme"
is.numeric(x)
sample(x, 1)
sample(x)
x = NA
is.numeric(NA)
sample(x, 1)
sample(x)
is this a bug in the code, or a bug in the documentation?
> To my mind, it is bizarre to have an important basic function which
> works for some argument lengths but not others. The convenience of
> being able to write sample(5,2) for sample(1:5,2) hardly seems worth
> inflicting inconsistency on all users -- but perhaps one of the
> designers of R/S can enlighten us on the design rationale here.
>
>
hopefully.
vQ
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