evaluation of exploration values
Tue 22 July 2014
For some application, it is usefull to evaluate some physical value over a grid. For each dimension of the grid, the order of magnitude to use is not obvious.Watch movie online The Transporter Refueled (2015)
grid evaluation
the function expand.grid() is suited
a <- expand.grid(c(1:10), 2*c(0:4)+1) b <- apply(a, 1, function(x){x[1] + 1/2 * x[2]})
the result is:
> cbind(a, b) Var1 Var2 b 1 1 1 1.5 2 2 1 2.5 3 3 1 3.5 4 4 1 4.5 5 5 1 5.5 6 6 1 6.5 7 7 1 7.5 8 8 1 8.5 9 9 1 9.5 10 10 1 10.5 11 1 3 2.5 12 2 3 3.5 13 3 3 4.5 14 4 3 5.5 15 5 3 6.5 16 6 3 7.5 17 7 3 8.5 18 8 3 9.5 19 9 3 10.5 20 10 3 11.5 21 1 5 3.5 22 2 5 4.5 23 3 5 5.5 24 4 5 6.5 25 5 5 7.5 26 6 5 8.5 27 7 5 9.5 28 8 5 10.5 29 9 5 11.5 30 10 5 12.5 31 1 7 4.5 32 2 7 5.5 33 3 7 6.5 34 4 7 7.5 35 5 7 8.5 36 6 7 9.5 37 7 7 10.5 38 8 7 11.5 39 9 7 12.5 40 10 7 13.5 41 1 9 5.5 42 2 9 6.5 43 3 9 7.5 44 4 9 8.5 45 5 9 9.5 46 6 9 10.5 47 7 9 11.5 48 8 9 12.5 49 9 9 13.5 50 10 9 14.5
order of magnitude exploration
This part is straightforward. It consists in computing the values to give to the expand.grid() function using expand.grid():
var1 <- apply(expand.grid(c(1,2,5), c(-1:3)), 1, function(x){x[1]* 10^(x[2])})
Note: if you want to draw this lines, abline() is suited
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