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  • Book Overview & Buying Learning R for Geospatial Analysis
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Learning R for Geospatial Analysis

Learning R for Geospatial Analysis

By : Michael Dorman
3.9 (7)
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Learning R for Geospatial Analysis

Learning R for Geospatial Analysis

3.9 (7)
By: Michael Dorman

Overview of this book

This book is intended for anyone who wants to learn how to efficiently analyze geospatial data with R, including GIS analysts, researchers, educators, and students who work with spatial data and who are interested in expanding their capabilities through programming. The book assumes familiarity with the basic geographic information concepts (such as spatial coordinates), but no prior experience with R and/or programming is required. By focusing on R exclusively, you will not need to depend on any external software—a working installation of R is all that is necessary to begin.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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10
A. External Datasets Used in Examples
11
B. Cited References
12
Index

Creating subsets of vectors


Creating subsets of data is one of the fundamental operations in data analysis. In this section, we will cover the two basic ways to create subsets of a vector. The first way involves numeric vectors, which specify the requested indices to be included in the subset. The second way involves using logical vectors, which specify for each element whether we would like to keep it or not.

Subsetting with numeric vectors of indices

Subsetting using numeric vectors of indices is done using the square brackets operator [, by providing the vector of indices within the square brackets. For example, we can select a single element of a vector by putting the value of the required index within brackets, as follows:

> x = c(5,6,1,2,3,7)
> x[3]
[1] 1
> x[1]
[1] 5
> x[6]
[1] 7

If we would like to, for example, find out the value of the last element in a given vector, we can use the length function, which returns its length (the index of the vectors' last element), as follows...

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Learning R for Geospatial Analysis
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