0% found this document useful (0 votes)
25 views24 pages

Sumit Kumar R Practical 20241211 163149 0000

Uploaded by

nain09364
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
25 views24 pages

Sumit Kumar R Practical 20241211 163149 0000

Uploaded by

nain09364
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 24

GURU JAMBHESHWAR UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND

TECHNOLOGY
Hisar -- Haryana(India)

Practical File
Of
R Programming
DEPARTMENT OF AI and DS

Submitted To: Submitted By:


Mrs. Jyotsana Sardana Mam Sumit Kumar
Komal
Assistant Professor Roll no. : 240252800062
240252800022
(AI&DS) Dept. Class : B.Sc. (AI&DS)
Project 1 : Install R and then install R Studio. Get yourself acquainted with
the GUI of various working windows of RStudio.
A Install and set up R and RStudio

Step 1: Install R
Download R:

• Visit the CRAN website.


https://cran.r-project.org/bin/windows/base/
• Choose your operating system (Windows, macOS, or Linux).
• Download and run the installer.

Install R:
• Follow the on-screen instructions to complete the installation.

Step 2: Install RStudio


Download RStudio:

• Visit the RStudio website.


https://posit.co/download/rstudio-desktop/
• Choose the free version of RStudio Desktop and download the installer for your
operating system.

Install RStudio:
• Run the installer and follow the on-screen instructions.

Step 3: Open RStudio


• Launch RStudio after installation. It will detect your R installation automatically.
B. Familiarize yourself with the interface and various windows
Getting Acquainted with RStudio's GUI

The RStudio interface is divided into four main panes, each designed for specific tasks.

1. Source/Editor Pane (Top-Left)


• Purpose: For writing and editing R scripts, markdown files, and other documents.

• Features:
o You can save your code in files (.R, .Rmd) and execute them in parts.
o Syntax highlighting makes the code easier to read.

2. Console Pane (Bottom-Left)


• Purpose: Where you run R commands directly.
• Features:
o Type commands, and see immediate output.
o Errors or warnings will appear here.

3. Environment/History Pane (Top-Right)


• Environment Tab:
o Lists all objects (variables, data frames, functions) currently in memory.
o Use this to monitor your workspace.
• History Tab:
o Tracks the history of commands you have executed.
o Allows you to reuse commands without retyping.

4. Files/Plots/Packages/Help/Viewer Pane (Bottom-Right)


• Files Tab: Manage files in your working directory.
• Plots Tab: Displays visualizations and plots generated in R.
• Packages Tab: Install, load, or update R packages.
• Help Tab: Access documentation for R functions and packages.
• Viewer Tab: Used for rendering HTML reports, markdown documents, or web-
based content.
Project 2 : Create Objects in R
A. Create a vector of integers from 1 to 20.
Program:

Output:

B. Create a vector of factor type for different weather conditions (Sunny, Rainy,
Cloudy, Snowy).
Program:

Output:

C. Create a list of vectors with the names of 5 countries and their respective populations.
Program:

"India", " America ", " SA", "Srilanka", " Iraq"

Output:

"America" "SA" "Srilanka" "Iraq"

D. Create a data frame with 5 employees, their age, department, and monthly salary.
Program:
3825,4632,4674,3563,3674

Output:

3825
4632
4674
3563
3674
Project 3 : Apply str () and summary () commands to the object
A. Str ():

• The str () function gives a compact, structural summary of an object.


• It shows the data type, structure, and a quick overview of the components of
the object, such as the variable names and their data types.

Program:

Output:

B. Summary ():
• The summary () function provides a statistical summary of an object.
• For numeric data, it includes minimum, maximum, mean, median, and
quartiles.
For factors, it shows the count of each level.

For other data types, it provides relevant summaries

Program:

Output:
Project 4 : String Manipulation
A. Load the stringr library and analyze the string: "apple, banana, cherry, date".Find and replace
"banana" with "blueberry".
Program:

Output:
Project 5: Vector Operations
A. Create a vector of numbers from 1 to 200, divisible by 4. Perform:
a) Calculate the length.
b) Extract the 10th, 25th, and 50th elements.
c) Replace values at index 15 with NA and find the mean of the modified vector.
Program:

Output:
Project 6:Matrix Operations
A. Create a 3x3 matrix with random integers:
a) Replace elements at positions (2, 2) with NA.
b) Compute the column-wise mean.
Program:

Output:
Project 7: String Operations
A. Analyze a vector of city names: c("New York", "London", "Tokyo", "Paris", "Berlin").
a) Count characters in each name.
b) Find cities containing the letter "o".
Program:

Output:
Project 8: Factor Data
A. Create a factor vector for vehicle types (Car, Bike, Bus, Train):
a)Display factor levels.

b) Modify levels to include "Truck".

Program:

Output:
Project 9:Employee Data Management
A. Create a data frame of 10 employees with names, age, and monthly salaries. Find the
employee with the highest salary.
Program:

Output:
Project 10: Histogram Plotting
A. Generate a histogram for the distribution of ages in a dataset of 100 people.
Program:

Output:
Project 11 : Scatter Plot with Regression
A. Create a scatter plot for height vs. weight data and add a regression line.
Program:

Output:
Project 12 : Data Frame Handling

A. Create a data frame of sales data (5 products, sales, profit). Find the most profitable
product.

Program:

Output:
Project 13 : Matrix Operations with Custom Data.
A. Perform transpose and inversion operations on a 4x4 matrix.

Program:

Output:
Project 14 : Advanced Visualization.
A. Plot the pressure dataset with different forms (line chart, bar chart).
Program:

Output:
Project 15. Generating a Matrix with Row-Major Order of Numbers in R.
A. Create a matrix m of five rows in a row -major order of numbers from 1 to 100
incremented by a step of 5 units.
a) Find row and columns -wise means of matrix m.
b) Find the minimum value for each row and column.
c) Find the transpose and sort the values in each columns in decreasing order.
d) Assign the row names as R1to R5 and column names C1 to C4.
e) Display all the elements of the second and fourth column without using indices.
f) Display all the elements of the first and third row without using indices.
g) Create a new matrix by deleting the second and fourth column of matrix m using indices and
column names.
h) Replace elements at indices (2,3), (2,4), (3,3), and (3,4) with NA values.
i) Replace elements at index (1,3) with NaN.
j) Check if matrix m contains any NA or NaN values and interpret the output.
k) Create two new matrices rm and cm by concatenating matrix m row-wise and column-wise with
itself.

Program:
Output:
Project 16. Matrix Multiplication with Randomly Generated Matrices in R.

A. Create a 4*3 matrix A of uniformly distributed random integer numbers between 1


to 100. Create another 3*4 matrix B with uniformly distributed random integer
numbers between 1 to 10. Perform matrix multiplication of the two matrices and
store the result in a third matrix C.

Program:

Output:

You might also like