> On Nov 16, 2016, at 8:43 AM, Jeff Newmiller wrote:
>
> I will start by admitting I don't know the answer to your question.
>
> However, I am responding because I think this should not be an issue in real
> life use of R. Data frames are lists of distinct vectors, each of which has
> its own
I will start by admitting I don't know the answer to your question.
However, I am responding because I think this should not be an issue in real
life use of R. Data frames are lists of distinct vectors, each of which has its
own reason for being present in the data, and normally each has its own
Hi All,
I build an empty dataframe to fill it will values later. I did the
following:
-- cut --
matrix(NA, 2, 2)
[,1] [,2]
[1,] NA NA
[2,] NA NA
> data.frame(matrix(NA, 2, 2))
X1 X2
1 NA NA
2 NA NA
> as.data.frame(matrix(NA, 2, 2))
V1 V2
1 NA NA
2 NA NA
-- cut --
Why does data.
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