Vectors are the most basic R data objects and there are six types of atomic vectors. They are logical, integer, double, complex, character and raw.
Vector Creation
Single Element Vector
Even when you write just one value in R, it becomes a vector of length 1 and belongs to one of the above vector types.
Live Demo# Atomic vector of type character. print("abc"); # Atomic vector of type double. print(12.5) # Atomic vector of type integer. print(63L) # Atomic vector of type logical. print(TRUE) # Atomic vector of type complex. print(2+3i) # Atomic vector of type raw. print(charToRaw('hello'))
When we execute the above code, it produces the following result −
[1] "abc" [1] 12.5 [1] 63 [1] TRUE [1] 2+3i [1] 68 65 6c 6c 6f
Multiple Elements Vector
Using colon operator with numeric data
Live Demo# Creating a sequence from 5 to 13. v <- 5:13 print(v) # Creating a sequence from 6.6 to 12.6. v <- 6.6:12.6 print(v) # If the final element specified does not belong to the sequence then it is discarded. v <- 3.8:11.4 print(v)
When we execute the above code, it produces the following result −
[1] 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 [1] 6.6 7.6 8.6 9.6 10.6 11.6 12.6 [1] 3.8 4.8 5.8 6.8 7.8 8.8 9.8 10.8
Using sequence (Seq.) operator
Live Demo# Create vector with elements from 5 to 9 incrementing by 0.4. print(seq(5, 9, by = 0.4))
When we execute the above code, it produces the following result −
[1] 5.0 5.4 5.8 6.2 6.6 7.0 7.4 7.8 8.2 8.6 9.0
Using the c() function
The non-character values are coerced to character type if one of the elements is a character.
Live Demo# The logical and numeric values are converted to characters. s <- c('apple','red',5,TRUE) print(s)
When we execute the above code, it produces the following result −
[1] "apple" "red" "5" "TRUE"
Accessing Vector Elements
Elements of a Vector are accessed using indexing. The [ ] brackets are used for indexing. Indexing starts with position 1. Giving a negative value in the index drops that element from result.TRUE, FALSE or 0 and 1 can also be used for indexing.
Live Demo# Accessing vector elements using position. t <- c("Sun","Mon","Tue","Wed","Thurs","Fri","Sat") u <- t[c(2,3,6)] print(u) # Accessing vector elements using logical indexing. v <- t[c(TRUE,FALSE,FALSE,FALSE,FALSE,TRUE,FALSE)] print(v) # Accessing vector elements using negative indexing. x <- t[c(-2,-5)] print(x) # Accessing vector elements using 0/1 indexing. y <- t[c(0,0,0,0,0,0,1)] print(y)
When we execute the above code, it produces the following result −
[1] "Mon" "Tue" "Fri" [1] "Sun" "Fri" [1] "Sun" "Tue" "Wed" "Fri" "Sat" [1] "Sun"
Vector Manipulation
Vector arithmetic
Two vectors of same length can be added, subtracted, multiplied or divided giving the result as a vector output.
Live Demo# Create two vectors. v1 <- c(3,8,4,5,0,11) v2 <- c(4,11,0,8,1,2) # Vector addition. add.result <- v1+v2 print(add.result) # Vector subtraction. sub.result <- v1-v2 print(sub.result) # Vector multiplication. multi.result <- v1*v2 print(multi.result) # Vector division. divi.result <- v1/v2 print(divi.result)
When we execute the above code, it produces the following result −
[1] 7 19 4 13 1 13 [1] -1 -3 4 -3 -1 9 [1] 12 88 0 40 0 22 [1] 0.7500000 0.7272727 Inf 0.6250000 0.0000000 5.5000000
Vector Element Recycling
If we apply arithmetic operations to two vectors of unequal length, then the elements of the shorter vector are recycled to complete the operations.
Live Demov1 <- c(3,8,4,5,0,11) v2 <- c(4,11) # V2 becomes c(4,11,4,11,4,11) add.result <- v1+v2 print(add.result) sub.result <- v1-v2 print(sub.result)
When we execute the above code, it produces the following result −
[1] 7 19 8 16 4 22 [1] -1 -3 0 -6 -4 0
Vector Element Sorting
Elements in a vector can be sorted using the sort() function.
Live Demov <- c(3,8,4,5,0,11, -9, 304) # Sort the elements of the vector. sort.result <- sort(v) print(sort.result) # Sort the elements in the reverse order. revsort.result <- sort(v, decreasing = TRUE) print(revsort.result) # Sorting character vectors. v <- c("Red","Blue","yellow","violet") sort.result <- sort(v) print(sort.result) # Sorting character vectors in reverse order. revsort.result <- sort(v, decreasing = TRUE) print(revsort.result)
When we execute the above code, it produces the following result −
[1] -9 0 3 4 5 8 11 304 [1] 304 11 8 5 4 3 0 -9 [1] "Blue" "Red" "violet" "yellow" [1] "yellow" "violet" "Red" "Blue"
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