Turn Ordinal String Variable to Continuous in R

Factors are data structures which are implemented to categorize the data or represent categorical data and store it on multiple levels. They can be stored as integers with a corresponding label to every unique integer. Though factors may look similar to character vectors, they are integers, and care must be taken while using them as strings. The factor accepts only a restricted number of distinct values. It is helpful in categorizing data and storing it on multiple levels.

Converting Factors to Numeric Values

At times you require to explicitly change factors to either numbers or text. To achieve this, one has to use the functions as.character() or as.numeric(). There are two steps for converting factor to numeric: Step 1: Convert the data vector into a factor. The factor() command is used to create and modify factors in R. Step 2: The factor is converted into a numeric vector using as.numeric(). When a factor is converted into a numeric vector, the numeric codes corresponding to the factor levels will be returned. Example: Take a data vector 'V' consisting of directions and its factor will be converted into numeric.

Python3

V = c("North", "South", "East", "East")

drn < - factor(V)

as.numeric(drn)

Output:

[1] 2 3 1 1

Converting a Factor that is a Number: If the factor is number, first convert it to a character vector and then to numeric. If a factor is a character then you need not convert it to a character. And if you try converting an alphabet character to numeric it will return NA. Example: Suppose we are taking costs of soaps of the various brands which are numbers with value s(29, 28, 210, 28, 29).

Python3

soap_cost < - factor(c( 29 , 28 , 210 , 28 , 29 ))

as.numeric(as.character(soap_cost))

Output:

[1]  29  28 210  28  29

However, if you simply use as. numeric(), the output is a vector of the internal level representations of the factor and not the original values.

Python3

soap_cost < - factor(c( 29 , 28 , 210 , 28 , 29 ))

as.numeric(soap_cost)

Output:

[1] 2 1 3 1 2

Converting Numeric value to a Factor

For converting a numeric into factor we use cut() function. cut() divides the range of numeric vector(assume x) which is to be converted by cutting into intervals and codes its value (x) according to which interval they fall. Level one corresponds to the leftmost, level two corresponds to the next leftmost, and so on.

Syntax: cut.default(x, breaks, labels = NULL, include.lowest = FALSE, right = TRUE, dig.lab = 3)

where,

  • When a number is given through 'break=' argument, the output factor is created by the division of the range of variables into that number of equal-length intervals.
  • In syntax include.lowest indicates whether an 'x[i]' which equals the lowest (for right= TRUE) break's value should be included. And 'right' in the syntax indicates whether the intervals should be open on the left and closed on the right or vice versa.
  • If labels are not provided then dig.lab is used. The number of digits used in formatting the break numbers is determined through it.

Example 1: Lets us assume an employee data set of age, salary and gender. To create a factor corresponding to age with three equally spaced levels we can write in R as follows:

Python3

age < - c( 40 , 49 , 48 , 40 , 67 , 52 , 53 )

salary < - c( 103200 , 106200 , 150200 , 10606 , 10390 , 14070 , 10220 )

gender < - c("male", "male", "transgender",

"female", "male", "female", "transgender")

employee< - data.frame(age, salary, gender)

wfact = cut(employee$age, 3 )

table(wfact)

Output:

wfact (40,49] (49,58] (58,67]        4       2       1        

Example 2: We will now put labels- young, medium and aged.

Python3

age < - c( 40 , 49 , 48 , 40 , 67 , 52 , 53 )

salary < - c( 103200 , 106200 , 150200 , 10606 , 10390 , 14070 , 10220 )

gender < - c("male", "male", "transgender",

"female", "male", "female", "transgender")

employee< - data.frame(age, salary, gender)

wfact = cut(employee$age, 3 , labels = c( 'Young' , 'Medium' , 'Aged' ))

table(wfact)

Output:

wfact  Young Medium   Aged       4      2      1        

The next examples will use 'norm()' for generating multivariate normal distributed random variants within the specified space. There are three arguments given to rnorm():

  • n: Number of random variables need to be generated
  • mean: Its value is 0 by default if not mentioned
  • sd: standard deviation value needs to be mentioned otherwise it is 1 by default

Syntax:

norm(n, mean, sd)

Python3

y < - rnorm( 100 )

table(cut(y, breaks = pi / 3 * ( - 3 : 3 )))

Output:

(-3.14,-2.09] (-2.09,-1.05]     (-1.05,0]      (0,1.05]   (1.05,2.09]              1            11            26            48            10    (2.09,3.14]              4        

The output factor is created by the division of the range of variables into 5 equal-length intervals through break argument.

Python3

age < - c( 40 , 49 , 48 , 40 , 67 , 52 , 53 )

gender < - c("male", "male", "transgender", "female", "male", "female", "transgender")

employee< - data.frame(age, gender)

wfact = cut(employee$age, breaks = 5 )

table(wfact)

Output:

wfact   (40,45.4] (45.4,50.8] (50.8,56.2] (56.2,61.6]   (61.6,67]            2           2           2           0           1        

Python3

y < - rnorm( 100 )

table(cut(y, breaks = pi / 3 * ( - 3 : 3 ), dig.lab = 5 ))

Output:

(-3.1416,-2.0944] (-2.0944,-1.0472]       (-1.0472,0]        (0,1.0472]                  5                13                33                28    (1.0472,2.0944]   (2.0944,3.1416]                 19                 2        

rodrigueztherstre.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/convert-factor-to-numeric-and-numeric-to-factor-in-r-programming/

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