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Converting R variables to sage

asked 2011-10-13 16:25:06 +0100

anonymous user

Anonymous

If I have a bunch of notebook cells with R code using the %r method, is there an easy way to grab the data as a varible in Python/Sage without converting the whole thing to use r.command syntax?

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answered 2011-10-14 23:33:33 +0100

kcrisman gravatar image

Victory! I knew this should be possible.

In the notebook:

%r
a <- c(1,2,3)
a

[1] 1 2 3

from sage.interfaces.r import RElement
b = RElement(r,'a')
c = b._sage_()
c

[1, 2, 3]

and then you can do stuff to c because it's not an RElement.

c[1] = 3
c

[1, 3, 3]

I don't know whether this is worth wrapping slightly better, or if that is even possible. But hopefully this works for you!

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Note this will only work with data that actually converts nicely into Sage/Python structures. For instance, I don't know whether data frames convert nicely into arrays or something.

kcrisman gravatar imagekcrisman ( 2011-10-14 23:34:33 +0100 )edit
4

answered 2011-11-11 17:23:04 +0100

Mike Hansen gravatar image

If you've done

%r
a <- c(1,2,3)

in one notebook cell. You can just do

r('a')._sage_()

to get back the list [1, 2, 3]. This is a bit easier than using RElement.

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Hah, do I look silly now! Can you think of any even simpler syntax that would be consistent with the rest of Sage? At the very least we should document this notebook behavior clearly in `r?`.

kcrisman gravatar imagekcrisman ( 2011-11-11 22:35:44 +0100 )edit
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answered 2011-10-14 18:15:10 +0100

kcrisman gravatar image

You at least have access to them, though only in printed format. Here's a typical example from the worksheet (go to "Edit" to see this, but it looks fine in the notebook).

{{{id=51|
%r
a <- c(1,2,3)
///
}}}

{{{id=52|
%r 
a
///
[1] 1 2 3
}}}

{{{id=58|
r.get('a')
///
'[1] 1 2 3'
}}}

I have a feeling there is another way to do this, though. The key is using _getitem_ but for RElements instead. I haven't quite nailed it down, and I have to go now, but this may be possible.

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answered 2011-10-13 18:18:37 +0100

Jason Grout gravatar image

Probably the easiest way is to write the data out to a file in the R cell and read it in using python in a Sage cell. Make sure to write it out to the DATA directory, which you can find by doing "print DATA" in a Sage cell.

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hmm.. I was hoping for a more direct variable conversion, but that will work. Thank you!

mlanting gravatar imagemlanting ( 2011-10-14 12:20:25 +0100 )edit

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Asked: 2011-10-13 16:25:06 +0100

Seen: 1,017 times

Last updated: Nov 11 '11