do these lists contain 3D arrays of the same dimensions? If yes, then
you could use
Reduce("+", pred.svm[[i]])[1,2,5]
otherwise a for-loop will also be clear and efficient, e.g.,
W <- pred.svm[[i]][[1]][1,2,5]
for (j in 2:20) {
W <- W + pred.svm[[i]][[j]][1,2,5]
}
I hope it helps.
Best,
Dimitris
On 3/4/2010 4:02 PM, Eleni Christodoulou wrote:> Dear list,
>
> I have some difficulty in manipulating list elements. More specifically, I
> am performing svm regression and have a list of lists, called pred.svm. The
> elements of the second list are 3D arrays. Thus I have pred.svm[[i]][[j]],
> with 1<=i<=5 and 1<=j<=20.
> I want to take the sum of the elements a specific array dimension across
all
> j, for one i. Mathematically speaking, I want to calculate *W* as:
>
> *W = pred.svm[[i]][[1]][1,2,5] + pred.svm[[i]][[2]][1,2,5]+
> pred.svm[[i]][[3]][1,2,5]+...+ pred.svm[[i]][[20]][1,2,5]*
>
> I have tried to apply the *lapply() *function but it seems that its
> arguments can only be vector elements of a list...Do I need to convert the
> array data to vector data?
>
> Any advice would be very welcome!
>
> Thanks a lot,
> Eleni
>
> [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>
> ______________________________________________
> R-help at r-project.org mailing list
> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
> PLEASE do read the posting guide
http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
>
--
Dimitris Rizopoulos
Assistant Professor
Department of Biostatistics
Erasmus University Medical Center
Address: PO Box 2040, 3000 CA Rotterdam, the Netherlands
Tel: +31/(0)10/7043478
Fax: +31/(0)10/7043014