R: Merge Duplicates In Column In Data.Frame By Condition In Another Column
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1
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10.9 years ago
ninninahm ▴ 70

Hi all!

I have the following problem.

  chr13  1260 1275   chr13_38134720_38136919
  chr13  1261 1276   chr13_38134720_38136919
  chr15   839  854   chr15_63332831_63335030
  chr15   840  856   chr15_63332831_63335030
  chr15   837  852   chr15_63332831_63335030
  chr15   842  857   chr15_63332831_63335030

In the 2. and 3. column are positions which I want to combine whenever the value in column 4 is the same. For example, I would want:

  chr13  1260 1276   chr13_38134720_38136919
  chr15   837  857   chr15_63332831_63335030

Any help is highly appreciated!!!

merge r • 20k views
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0
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It sounds like by "combine", you mean the minimum from column 2 and the maximum from column 3.

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4
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10.9 years ago
David W 4.9k

This is the sort of problem plyr can make life easier. It does the same "split-apply-combine" approach as the dpryan79's answer, but can wrap it all up in a (I think) nice and consistent syntax

In this case you could do something like

library(plyr)
d = read.table(text="
  chr13  1260 1275   chr13_38134720_38136919
  chr13  1261 1276   chr13_38134720_38136919
  chr15   839  854   chr15_63332831_63335030
  chr15   840  856   chr15_63332831_63335030
  chr15   837  852   chr15_63332831_63335030
  chr15   842  857   chr15_63332831_63335030
")

head(d)
#     V1   V2   V3                      V4
#1 chr13 1260 1275 chr13_38134720_38136919
#2 chr13 1261 1276 chr13_38134720_38136919
#3 chr15  839  854 chr15_63332831_63335030

ddply(d, .(V4), function(x) c( min(x[,2]), max(x[,3]) ) )
#                       V4   V1   V2
#1 chr13_38134720_38136919 1260 1276
#2 chr15_63332831_63335030  837  857
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In fact, this is exactly what I had in mind, only I couldn't remember that it was the plyr package :p This is a great solution.

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3
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10.9 years ago

Given a dataframe d:

> d
     V1   V2   V3                      V4
1 chr13 1260 1275 chr13_38134720_38136919
2 chr13 1261 1276 chr13_38134720_38136919
3 chr15  839  854 chr15_63332831_63335030
4 chr15  840  856 chr15_63332831_63335030
5 chr15  837  852 chr15_63332831_63335030
6 chr15  842  857 chr15_63332831_63335030

Split it by V4, apply a function, rotate back to the right shape and then reconvert to a dataframe:

dl <- split(d, d$V4)
d2 <- as.data.frame(t(sapply(dl, function(x) {c(as.character(unique(x$V1)), min(x$V2), max(x$V3), as.character(unique(x$V4)))})))
d2$V2 <- as.numeric(as.character(d2$V2)) #Convert from factors to numbers
d2$V3 <- as.numeric(as.character(d2$V3))

There are likely shorter solutions for the sapply step, but that's the general idea.

Edit: You could also make it a GRanges object and then split() and reduce() that, though if you have regions that aren't remotely near each other that may not work perfectly.

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this throws exception on me, Error in x$V1 : $ operator is invalid for atomic vectors, isn't x there a vector?

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I guess I left out the dl <- split(d, d$V4) command.

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0
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yes, this is a nice solution. I had no idea of such a cool way to split a data frame. thank you!

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