Book Image

Machine Learning with R Cookbook

By : Yu-Wei, Chiu (David Chiu)
Book Image

Machine Learning with R Cookbook

By: Yu-Wei, Chiu (David Chiu)

Overview of this book

<p>The R language is a powerful open source functional programming language. At its core, R is a statistical programming language that provides impressive tools to analyze data and create high-level graphics.</p> <p>This book covers the basics of R by setting up a user-friendly programming environment and performing data ETL in R. Data exploration examples are provided that demonstrate how powerful data visualization and machine learning is in discovering hidden relationships. You will then dive into important machine learning topics, including data classification, regression, clustering, association rule mining, and dimension reduction.</p>
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Machine Learning with R Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Resources for R and Machine Learning
Dataset – Survival of Passengers on the Titanic
Index

Understanding data sampling in R


Sampling is a method to select a subset of data from a statistical population, which can use the characteristics of the population to estimate the whole population. The following recipe will demonstrate how to generate samples in R.

Getting ready

Make sure that you have an R working environment for the following recipe.

How to do it...

Perform the following steps to understand data sampling in R:

  1. In order to generate random samples of a given population, the user can simply use the sample function:

    > sample(1:10)
    
  2. To specify the number of items returned, the user can set the assigned value to the size argument:

    > sample(1:10, size = 5)
    
  3. Moreover, the sample can also generate Bernoulli trials by specifying replace = TRUE (default is FALSE):

    > sample(c(0,1), 10, replace = TRUE)
    

How it works...

As we saw in the preceding demonstration, the sample function can generate random samples from a specified population. The returned number from records can be designated...