Now I'm doing it by looping trhough a sorted vector, but maybe there is a faster way using internal R functions, and maybe I don't even need to sort.
vect = c(41,42,5,6,3,12,10,15,2,3,4,13,2,33,4,1,1)
vect = sort(vect)
print(vect)
outvect = mat.or.vec(length(vect),1)
outvect[1] = counter = 1
for(i in 2:length(vect)) {
if (vect[i] != vect[i-1]) { counter = counter + 1 }
outvect[i] = counter
}
print(cbind(vect,outvect))
vect outvect
[1,] 1 1
[2,] 1 1
[3,] 2 2
[4,] 2 2
[5,] 3 3
[6,] 3 3
[7,] 4 4
[8,] 4 4
[9,] 5 5
[10,] 6 6
[11,] 10 7
[12,] 12 8
[13,] 13 9
[14,] 15 10
[15,] 33 11
[16,] 41 12
[17,] 42 13
The code is used to make charts with integers on the X axis instead of real data because for me distance between the X values is not important. So in my case the smallest x value is always 1. and the largest is always equal to how many X values are there.
-- edit: due to some misuderstanding about my question I added self sufficient code with output.
csvdata)? What is the final product supposed to look like? Are you just trying to get a tabulation of the unique values in csvdata? If so, look attable()– Chase Dec 9 '10 at 18:15