tapp | R Documentation |
Apply a function to subsets of layers of a SpatRaster (similar to tapply
and aggregate
). The layers are combined based on the index
.
The number of layers in the output SpatRaster equals the number of unique values in index
times the number of values that the supplied function returns for a single vector of numbers.
For example, if you have a SpatRaster with 6 layers, you can use index=c(1,1,1,2,2,2)
and fun=sum
. This will return a SpatRaster with two layers. The first layer is the sum of the first three layers in the input SpatRaster, and the second layer is the sum of the last three layers in the input SpatRaster. Indices are recycled such that index=c(1,2)
would also return a SpatRaster with two layers (one based on the odd layers (1,3,5), the other based on the even layers (2,4,6)).
The index can also be one of the following values to group by time period (if x
has the appropriate time
values): "years", "months", "yearmonths", "week" (the ISO 8601 week number, see Details), "yearweeks", "days", "doy" (day of the year), "7days" (seven-day periods starting at Jan 1 of each year), "10days", or "15days". It can also be a function that makes groups from time values.
See app
or Summary-methods
if you want to use a more efficient function that returns multiple layers based on all layers in the SpatRaster.
## S4 method for signature 'SpatRaster'
tapp(x, index, fun, ..., cores=1, filename="", overwrite=FALSE, wopt=list())
x |
SpatRaster |
index |
factor or numeric (integer). Vector of length |
fun |
function to be applied. The following functions have been re-implemented in C++ for speed: "sum", "mean", "median", "modal", "which", "which.min", "which.max", "min", "max", "prod", "any", "all", "sd", "std", "first". To use the base-R function for say, "min", you could use something like |
... |
additional arguments passed to |
cores |
positive integer. If |
filename |
character. Output filename |
overwrite |
logical. If |
wopt |
list with named options for writing files as in |
"week" follows the ISO 8601 definition. Weeks start on Monday. If the week containing 1 January has four or more days in the new year, then it is considered week "01". Otherwise, it is the last week of the previous year (week "52" or "53", and the next week is week 1.
SpatRaster
app
, Summary-methods
r <- rast(ncols=10, nrows=10)
values(r) <- 1:ncell(r)
s <- c(r, r, r, r, r, r)
s <- s * 1:6
b1 <- tapp(s, index=c(1,1,1,2,2,2), fun=sum)
b1
b2 <- tapp(s, c(1,2,3,1,2,3), fun=sum)
b2
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.