silvia giussani
2016-Oct-07 16:57 UTC
[R] turning comma separated string from multiple choices into
Hi all, could you please tell me if you find a solution to this problem (in Subject)? June Kim wrote:>* Hello,*>>* I use google docs' Forms to conduct surveys online. Multiple choices*>* questions are coded as comma separated values.*>>* For example,*>>* if the question is like:*>>* 1. What magazines do you currently subscribe to? (you can choose*>* multiple choices)*>* 1) Fast Company*>* 2) Havard Business Review*>* 3) Business Week*>* 4) The Economist*>>* And if the subject chose 1) and 3), the data is coded as a cell in a*>* spreadsheet as,*>>* "Fast Company, Business Week"*>>* I read the data with read.csv into R. To analyze the data, I have to*>* change that string into something like flags(indicator variables?).*>* That is, there should be 4 variables, of which values are either 1 or*>* 0, indicating chosen or not-chosen respectively.*>>* Suppose the data is something like,*>>>>* survey1*>>>* age favorite_magazine*>* 1 29 Fast Company*>* 2 31 Fast Company, Business Week*>* 3 32 Havard Business Review, Business Week, The Economist*>>>* Then I have to chop the string in favorite_magazine column to turn*>* that data into something like,*>>>>* survey1transformed*>>>* age Fast Company Havard Business Review Business Week The Economist*>* 1 29 1 0 0 0*>* 2 31 1 0 1 0*>* 3 32 0 1 1 1*>>>* Actually I have many more multiple choice questions in the survey.*>>* What is the easy elegant and natural way in R to do the job?*>I'd look into something like as.data.frame(lapply(strings, grep, x=favorite_magazine, fixed=TRUE)), where strings <- c("Fast Company", "Havard Business Review", ...). (I take it that the mechanism is such that you can rely on at least having everything misspelled in the same way? If it is alternatingly "Havard" and "Harvard", then things get a bit trickier.) Thank you and regards, Silvia Giussani [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
Bob Rudis
2016-Oct-10 11:59 UTC
[R] turning comma separated string from multiple choices into
Take a look at tidyr::separate() On Fri, Oct 7, 2016 at 12:57 PM, silvia giussani <silvia1.giussani at gmail.com> wrote:> Hi all, > > > > could you please tell me if you find a solution to this problem (in > Subject)? > > > > June Kim wrote: > >>* Hello,* > >> > >>* I use google docs' Forms to conduct surveys online. Multiple choices* > >>* questions are coded as comma separated values.* > >> > >>* For example,* > >> > >>* if the question is like:* > >> > >>* 1. What magazines do you currently subscribe to? (you can choose* > >>* multiple choices)* > >>* 1) Fast Company* > >>* 2) Havard Business Review* > >>* 3) Business Week* > >>* 4) The Economist* > >> > >>* And if the subject chose 1) and 3), the data is coded as a cell in a* > >>* spreadsheet as,* > >> > >>* "Fast Company, Business Week"* > >> > >>* I read the data with read.csv into R. To analyze the data, I have to* > >>* change that string into something like flags(indicator variables?).* > >>* That is, there should be 4 variables, of which values are either 1 or* > >>* 0, indicating chosen or not-chosen respectively.* > >> > >>* Suppose the data is something like,* > >> > >> > >>>* survey1* > >>> > >>* age favorite_magazine* > >>* 1 29 Fast Company* > >>* 2 31 Fast Company, Business Week* > >>* 3 32 Havard Business Review, Business Week, The Economist* > >> > >> > >>* Then I have to chop the string in favorite_magazine column to turn* > >>* that data into something like,* > >> > >> > >>>* survey1transformed* > >>> > >>* age Fast Company Havard Business Review Business Week The Economist* > >>* 1 29 1 0 0 0* > >>* 2 31 1 0 1 0* > >>* 3 32 0 1 1 1* > >> > >> > >>* Actually I have many more multiple choice questions in the survey.* > >> > >>* What is the easy elegant and natural way in R to do the job?* > >> > > > > I'd look into something like as.data.frame(lapply(strings, grep, > > x=favorite_magazine, fixed=TRUE)), where strings <- c("Fast Company", > > "Havard Business Review", ...). > > > > (I take it that the mechanism is such that you can rely on at least > > having everything misspelled in the same way? If it is alternatingly > > "Havard" and "Harvard", then things get a bit trickier.) > > > > Thank you and regards, > > Silvia Giussani > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > > ______________________________________________ > R-help at r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see > 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.