Book Image

R for Data Science Cookbook (n)

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

R for Data Science Cookbook (n)

By: Yu-Wei, Chiu (David Chiu)

Overview of this book

This cookbook offers a range of data analysis samples in simple and straightforward R code, providing step-by-step resources and time-saving methods to help you solve data problems efficiently. The first section deals with how to create R functions to avoid the unnecessary duplication of code. You will learn how to prepare, process, and perform sophisticated ETL for heterogeneous data sources with R packages. An example of data manipulation is provided, illustrating how to use the “dplyr” and “data.table” packages to efficiently process larger data structures. We also focus on “ggplot2” and show you how to create advanced figures for data exploration. In addition, you will learn how to build an interactive report using the “ggvis” package. Later chapters offer insight into time series analysis on financial data, while there is detailed information on the hot topic of machine learning, including data classification, regression, clustering, association rule mining, and dimension reduction. By the end of this book, you will understand how to resolve issues and will be able to comfortably offer solutions to problems encountered while performing data analysis.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
R for Data Science Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Adding new records


For those of you familiar with databases, you may already know how to perform an insert operation to append a new record to the dataset. Alternatively, you can use an alter operation to add a new column (attribute) into a table. In R, you can also perform insert and alter operations but much more easily. We will introduce the rbind and cbind function in this recipe so that you can easily append a new record or new attribute to the current dataset with R.

Getting ready

Refer to the Converting data types recipe and convert each attribute of imported data into the proper data type. Also, rename the columns of the employees and salaries datasets by following the steps from the Renaming the data variable recipe.

How to do it…

Perform the following steps to add a new record or new variable into the dataset:

  1. First, use rbind to insert a new record to employees:

    > employees <- rbind(employees, c(10011, '1960-01-01', 'Jhon', 'Doe', 'M', '1988-01-01'))
    
  2. We can then reassign the...