m_ply | R Documentation |
Call a multi-argument function with values taken from columns of an data frame or array, and discard results into a list.
m_ply(
.data,
.fun = NULL,
...,
.expand = TRUE,
.progress = "none",
.inform = FALSE,
.print = FALSE,
.parallel = FALSE,
.paropts = NULL
)
.data |
matrix or data frame to use as source of arguments |
.fun |
function to apply to each piece |
... |
other arguments passed on to |
.expand |
should output be 1d (expand = FALSE), with an element for each row; or nd (expand = TRUE), with a dimension for each variable. |
.progress |
name of the progress bar to use, see
|
.inform |
produce informative error messages? This is turned off by default because it substantially slows processing speed, but is very useful for debugging |
.print |
automatically print each result? (default: |
.parallel |
if |
.paropts |
a list of additional options passed into
the |
The m*ply
functions are the plyr
version of mapply
,
specialised according to the type of output they produce. These functions
are just a convenient wrapper around a*ply
with margins = 1
and .fun
wrapped in splat
.
Nothing
Call a multi-argument function with values taken from columns of an data frame or array
All output is discarded. This is useful for functions that you are calling purely for their side effects like displaying plots or saving output.
Hadley Wickham (2011). The Split-Apply-Combine Strategy for Data Analysis. Journal of Statistical Software, 40(1), 1-29. https://www.jstatsoft.org/v40/i01/.
Other multiple arguments input:
maply()
,
mdply()
,
mlply()
Other no output:
a_ply()
,
d_ply()
,
l_ply()
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