How do you create vectors with specific intervals in R?

Luli picture Luli · Mar 24, 2013 · Viewed 136.4k times · Source

I have a question about creating vectors. If I do a <- 1:10, "a" has the values 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10.

My question is how do you create a vector with specific intervals between its elements. For example, I would like to create a vector that has the values from 1 to 100 but only count in intervals of 5 so that I get a vector that has the values 5,10,15,20,...,95,100

I think that in Matlab we can do 1:5:100, how do we do this using R?

I could try doing 5*(1:20) but is there a shorter way? (since in this case I would need to know the whole length (100) and then divide by the size of the interval (5) to get the 20)

Answer

Arun picture Arun · Mar 24, 2013

In R the equivalent function is seq and you can use it with the option by:

seq(from = 5, to = 100, by = 5)
# [1]   5  10  15  20  25  30  35  40  45  50  55  60  65  70  75  80  85  90  95 100

In addition to by you can also have other options such as length.out and along.with.

length.out: If you want to get a total of 10 numbers between 0 and 1, for example:

seq(0, 1, length.out = 10)
# gives 10 equally spaced numbers from 0 to 1

along.with: It takes the length of the vector you supply as input and provides a vector from 1:length(input).

seq(along.with=c(10,20,30))
# [1] 1 2 3

Although, instead of using the along.with option, it is recommended to use seq_along in this case. From the documentation for ?seq

seq is generic, and only the default method is described here. Note that it dispatches on the class of the first argument irrespective of argument names. This can have unintended consequences if it is called with just one argument intending this to be taken as along.with: it is much better to use seq_along in that case.

seq_along: Instead of seq(along.with(.))

seq_along(c(10,20,30))
# [1] 1 2 3

Hope this helps.