scale_data_frame
centers and/or
scales the columns of a data frame (or matrix).
scale_data_frame(x, center = TRUE, scale = TRUE)
a data frame or a numeric matrix (or vector). For matrices or vectors,
scale()
is used.
either a logical value or numeric-alike vector of length
equal to the number of columns of x
, where
‘numeric-alike’ means that as.numeric(.)
will
be applied successfully if is.numeric(.)
is not true.
either a logical value or a numeric-alike vector of length
equal to the number of columns of x
.
For scale.default
, the centered, scaled data frame. Non-numeric columns are ignored.
Note that logicals are treated as 0/1-numerics to be consistent with scale()
.
The numeric centering and scalings used (if any) are returned as attributes
"scaled:center"
and "scaled:scale"
- but only for the numeric/logical columns.
The value of center
determines how column centering is
performed. If center
is a numeric-alike vector with length equal to
the number of numeric/logical columns of x
, then each column of x
has
the corresponding value from center
subtracted from it. If
center
is TRUE
then centering is done by subtracting the
column means (omitting NA
s) of x
from their
corresponding columns, and if center
is FALSE
, no
centering is done.
The value of scale
determines how column scaling is performed
(after centering). If scale
is a numeric-alike vector with length
equal to the number of numeric/logiocal columns of x
, then each column of
x
is divided by the corresponding value from scale
.
If scale
is TRUE
then scaling is done by dividing the
(centered) columns of x
by their standard deviations if
center
is TRUE
, and the root mean square otherwise.
If scale
is FALSE
, no scaling is done.
The root-mean-square for a (possibly centered) column is defined as
\(\sqrt{\sum(x^2)/(n-1)}\), where \(x\) is
a vector of the non-missing values and \(n\) is the number of
non-missing values. In the case center = TRUE
, this is the
same as the standard deviation, but in general it is not. (To scale
by the standard deviations without centering, use
scale(x, center = FALSE, scale = apply(x, 2, sd, na.rm = TRUE))
.)
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
sweep
which allows centering (and scaling) with
arbitrary statistics.
# NOT RUN {
require(stats)
data(iris)
summary(scale_data_frame(iris))
# }
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