I have a dataframe with a column of p-values, and I want to make a selection on these p-value开发者_开发问答s.
> pvalues_anova
[1] 9.693919e-01 9.781728e-01 9.918415e-01 9.716883e-01 1.667183e-02
[6] 9.952762e-02 5.386854e-01 9.997699e-01 8.714044e-01 7.211856e-01
[11] 9.536330e-01 9.239667e-01 9.645590e-01 9.478572e-01 6.243775e-01
[16] 5.608563e-01 1.371190e-04 9.601970e-01 9.988648e-01 9.698365e-01
[21] 2.795891e-06 1.290176e-01 7.125751e-01 5.193604e-01 4.835312e-04
Selection way:
anovatest<- results[ - which(results$pvalues_anova < 0.8) ,]
The function works really fine if I use it in R. But if I run it in another application (galaxy), the numbers which don't have e-01
e.g. 4.835312e-04
are not thrown out.
Is there another way to notate p-values, like 0.0004835312
instead of 4.835312e-04
?
You can effectively remove scientific notation in printing with this code:
options(scipen=999)
format(99999999,scientific = FALSE)
gives
99999999
Summarising all existing answers
(And adding a few of my points)
Note : In the below explanation, value
is the number to be represented in some (integer/float) format.
Solution 1 :
options(scipen=999)
Solution 2 :
format(value, scientific=FALSE);
Solution 3 :
as.integer(value);
Solution 4 :
You can use integers which don't get printed in scientific notation. You can specify that your number is an integer by putting an "L" behind it
paste(100000L)
will print 100000
Solution 5 :
Control formatting tightly using 'sprintf()'
sprintf("%6d", 100000)
will print 100000
Solution 6 :
prettyNum(value, scientific = FALSE, digits = 16)
I also find the prettyNum(..., scientific = FALSE)
function useful for printing when I don't want trailing zeros. Note that these functions are useful for printing purposes, i.e., the output of these functions are strings, not numbers.
p_value <- c(2.45496e-5, 3e-17, 5.002e-5, 0.3, 123456789.123456789)
format(p_value, scientific = FALSE)
#> [1] " 0.00002454960000000" " 0.00000000000000003"
#> [3] " 0.00005002000000000" " 0.29999999999999999"
#> [5] "123456789.12345679104328156"
format(p_value, scientific = FALSE, drop0trailing = TRUE)
#> [1] " 0.0000245496" " 0.00000000000000003"
#> [3] " 0.00005002" " 0.29999999999999999"
#> [5] "123456789.12345679104328156"
# Please note that the last number's last two digits are rounded:
prettyNum(p_value, scientific = FALSE, digits = 16)
#> [1] "0.0000245496" "0.00000000000000003" "0.00005002"
#> [4] "0.3" "123456789.1234568"
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