> z <- read.table("clipboard")
> z
V1 V2
1 1990 20
2 1991 15
3 1995 17
4 1997 9
5 1998 10
6 1999 11
7 2000 5
> zz <- merge(data.frame(V1=1990:2000), z, by="V1", all.x=T)
> plot(zz, type="l")
Jacques VESLOT
INRA - Biostatistique & Processus Spatiaux
Site Agroparc 84914 Avignon Cedex 9, France
Tel: +33 (0) 4 32 72 21 58
Fax: +33 (0) 4 32 72 21 84
bioinfonews at pt.lu a ?crit :> Hi,
>
> I've been using R for a few weeks now, but consider myself still a
> newbie, especially in what concerns the basics of data handling in R.
>
> My situation is this:
> I read in data from a database using RODBC, and then use "table"
to
> produce a table of "counts per years", table which I give to
"plot".
> All is well, as long as there are no gaps in the years sequence, but
> now I have the following result (example):
>
> 1990 20
> 1991 15
> 1995 17
> 1997 9
> 1998 10
> 1999 11
> 2000 5
>
> The "plot" function is quite intelligent, in the sense that it
draws
> appropriate gaps in the x-axis between years, but not intelligent
> enough to interrupt the data line during the gap. This gives the
> impression that, although no year is marked on the x-axis between 1991
> and 1995, there has been data for this period, which is not correct.
>
> What I tried to do is convert the table to a matrix, insert zeros for
> the missing years using rbind and cbind, and convert the result back
> to table. But the structure of this resulting table is not the same as
> for the originating table, so that I need to pass "tab[1,]" to
"plot".
> It's no longer a contingency table in fact.
>
> I've seen in the mailing list archives that there is an issue on using
> "table"s when matrixes or other structures would be more
appropriate.
>
> I like the "table", because "plot" automatically plots
the
> corresponding years on the x-axis, which I find less error-prone than
> adding the tick labels later by hand, i.e. the association between
> years and counts is stronger.
>
> Also, as I tabulate counts of cases per gender, or per age categories,
> I think a contingency table is the right thing to use, isn't it?
>
> I'd be glad on any advice about what would be the best data structure
> to handle my situation, and I'd also like to know how I could
> automagically check a list of "year, cases" rows against a fixed
list
> of years, insert zero or "NA" values for missing years, and get
an
> easily usable result that I can forward to "plot" or
"barplot".
>
> Thanks a lot in advance,
>
> Anne-Marie
>
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