Version: | 1.2-5 |
Date: | 2023-02-23 |
Title: | Extended Model Formulas |
Description: | Infrastructure for extended formulas with multiple parts on the right-hand side and/or multiple responses on the left-hand side (see <doi:10.18637/jss.v034.i01>). |
Depends: | R (≥ 2.0.0), stats |
License: | GPL-2 | GPL-3 |
NeedsCompilation: | no |
Packaged: | 2023-02-23 22:47:03 UTC; zeileis |
Author: | Achim Zeileis |
Maintainer: | Achim Zeileis <Achim.Zeileis@R-project.org> |
Repository: | CRAN |
Date/Publication: | 2023-02-24 08:52:30 UTC |
Extended Formulas: Multiple Responses and Multiple Regressor Parts
Description
The new class Formula
extends the base class
formula
by allowing for multiple responses
and multiple parts of regressors.
Usage
Formula(object)
## S3 method for class 'Formula'
formula(x, lhs = NULL, rhs = NULL,
collapse = FALSE, update = FALSE, drop = TRUE, ...)
as.Formula(x, ...)
is.Formula(object)
Arguments
object , x |
an object. For |
lhs , rhs |
indexes specifying which elements of the left- and
right-hand side, respectively, should be employed. |
collapse |
logical. Should multiple parts (if any) be collapsed
to a single part (essentially by replacing the |
update |
logical. Only used if |
drop |
logical. Should the |
... |
further arguments. |
Details
Formula
objects extend the basic formula
objects.
These extensions include multi-part formulas such as
y ~ x1 + x2 | u1 + u2 + u3 | v1 + v2
, multiple response
formulas y1 + y2 ~ x1 + x2 + x3
, multi-part responses
such as y1 | y2 + y3 ~ x
, and combinations of these.
The Formula
creates a Formula
object from a formula
which can have the |
operator on the left- and/or right-hand
side (LHS and/or RHS). Essentially, it stores the original formula
along with attribute lists containing the decomposed parts for the LHS
and RHS, respectively.
The main motivation for providing the Formula
class is to be
able to conveniently compute model frames and model matrices or extract
selected responses based on an extended formula language. This functionality
is provided by methods to the generics model.frame
,
and model.matrix
. For details and examples, see
their manual page: model.frame.Formula
.
In addition to these workhorses, a few further methods and functions are provided.
By default, the formula()
method switches back to the original
formula
. Additionally, it allows selection of subsets of the
LHS and/or RHS (via lhs
, and rhs
) and collapsing
multiple parts on the LHS and/or RHS into a single part (via collapse
).
is.Formula
checks whether the argument inherits from the
Formula
class.
as.Formula
is a generic for coercing to Formula
, the
default method first coerces to formula
and then calls
Formula
. The default and formula
method also take an
optional env
argument, specifying the environment of the resulting
Formula
. In the latter case, this defaults to the environment
of the formula
supplied.
Methods to further standard generics print
,
update
, and length
are provided
for Formula
objects. The latter reports the number of parts on
the LHS and RHS, respectively.
Value
Formula
returns an object of class Formula
which inherits from formula
. It is the original formula
plus two attributes "lhs"
and "rhs"
that contain the
parts of the decomposed left- and right-hand side, respectively.
References
Zeileis A, Croissant Y (2010). Extended Model Formulas in R: Multiple Parts and Multiple Responses. Journal of Statistical Software, 34(1), 1–13. doi:10.18637/jss.v034.i01
See Also
Examples
## create a simple Formula with one response and two regressor parts
f1 <- y ~ x1 + x2 | z1 + z2 + z3
F1 <- Formula(f1)
class(F1)
length(F1)
## switch back to original formula
formula(F1)
## create formula with various transformations
formula(F1, rhs = 1)
formula(F1, collapse = TRUE)
formula(F1, lhs = 0, rhs = 2)
## put it together from its parts
as.Formula(y ~ x1 + x2, ~ z1 + z2 + z3)
## update the formula
update(F1, . ~ . + I(x1^2) | . - z2 - z3)
update(F1, . | y2 + y3 ~ .)
# create a multi-response multi-part formula
f2 <- y1 | y2 + y3 ~ x1 + I(x2^2) | 0 + log(x1) | x3 / x4
F2 <- Formula(f2)
length(F2)
## obtain various subsets using standard indexing
## no lhs, first/seconde rhs
formula(F2, lhs = 0, rhs = 1:2)
formula(F2, lhs = 0, rhs = -3)
formula(F2, lhs = 0, rhs = c(TRUE, TRUE, FALSE))
## first lhs, third rhs
formula(F2, lhs = c(TRUE, FALSE), rhs = 3)
Model Frame/Matrix/Response Construction for Extended Formulas
Description
Computation of model frames, model matrices, and model responses for
extended formulas of class Formula
.
Usage
## S3 method for class 'Formula'
model.frame(formula, data = NULL, ...,
lhs = NULL, rhs = NULL, dot = "separate")
## S3 method for class 'Formula'
model.matrix(object, data = environment(object), ...,
lhs = NULL, rhs = 1, dot = "separate")
## S3 method for class 'Formula'
terms(x, ...,
lhs = NULL, rhs = NULL, dot = "separate")
model.part(object, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Formula'
model.part(object, data, lhs = 0, rhs = 0,
drop = FALSE, terms = FALSE, dot = NULL, ...)
Arguments
formula , object , x |
an object of class |
data |
a data.frame, list or environment containing the variables in
|
lhs , rhs |
indexes specifying which elements of the left- and
right-hand side, respectively, should be employed. |
dot |
character specifying how to process formula parts with a dot
( |
drop |
logical. Should the |
terms |
logical. Should the |
... |
further arguments passed to the respective
|
Details
All three model computations leverage the corresponding standard methods. Additionally, they allow specification of the part(s) of the left- and right-hand side (LHS and RHS) that should be included in the computation.
The idea underlying all three model computations is to extract a suitable
formula
from the more general Formula
and then calling
the standard model.frame
, model.matrix
,
and terms
methods.
More specifically, if the Formula
has multiple parts on the RHS,
they are collapsed, essentially replacing |
by +
. If there
is only a single response on the LHS, then it is kept on the LHS.
Otherwise all parts of the formula are collapsed on the RHS (because formula
objects can not have multiple responses). Hence, for multi-response Formula
objects, the (non-generic) model.response
does
not give the correct results. To avoid confusion a new generic model.part
with suitable formula
method is provided which can always
be used instead of model.response
. Note, however, that it has a different
syntax: It requires the Formula
object in addition to the readily
processed model.frame
supplied in data
(and optionally the lhs
). Also, it returns either a data.frame
with
multiple columns or a single column (dropping the data.frame
property)
depending on whether multiple responses are employed or not.
If the the formula contains one or more dots (.
), some care has to be
taken to process these correctly, especially if the LHS contains transformartions
(such as log
, sqrt
, cbind
, Surv
, etc.). Calling the
terms
method with the original data (untransformed, if any) resolves
all dots (by default separately for each part, otherwise sequentially) and also
includes the original and updated formula as part of the terms. When calling
model.part
either the original untransformed data should be provided
along with a dot
specification or the transformed model.frame
from the same formula without another dot
specification (in which
case the dot
is inferred from the terms
of the model.frame
).
References
Zeileis A, Croissant Y (2010). Extended Model Formulas in R: Multiple Parts and Multiple Responses. Journal of Statistical Software, 34(1), 1–13. doi:10.18637/jss.v034.i01
See Also
Formula
, model.frame
,
model.matrix
, terms
,
model.response
Examples
## artificial example data
set.seed(1090)
dat <- as.data.frame(matrix(round(runif(21), digits = 2), ncol = 7))
colnames(dat) <- c("y1", "y2", "y3", "x1", "x2", "x3", "x4")
for(i in c(2, 6:7)) dat[[i]] <- factor(dat[[i]] > 0.5, labels = c("a", "b"))
dat$y2[1] <- NA
dat
######################################
## single response and two-part RHS ##
######################################
## single response with two-part RHS
F1 <- Formula(log(y1) ~ x1 + x2 | I(x1^2))
length(F1)
## set up model frame
mf1 <- model.frame(F1, data = dat)
mf1
## extract single response
model.part(F1, data = mf1, lhs = 1, drop = TRUE)
model.response(mf1)
## model.response() works as usual
## extract model matrices
model.matrix(F1, data = mf1, rhs = 1)
model.matrix(F1, data = mf1, rhs = 2)
#########################################
## multiple responses and multiple RHS ##
#########################################
## set up Formula
F2 <- Formula(y1 + y2 | log(y3) ~ x1 + I(x2^2) | 0 + log(x1) | x3 / x4)
length(F2)
## set up full model frame
mf2 <- model.frame(F2, data = dat)
mf2
## extract responses
model.part(F2, data = mf2, lhs = 1)
model.part(F2, data = mf2, lhs = 2)
## model.response(mf2) does not give correct results!
## extract model matrices
model.matrix(F2, data = mf2, rhs = 1)
model.matrix(F2, data = mf2, rhs = 2)
model.matrix(F2, data = mf2, rhs = 3)
#######################
## Formulas with '.' ##
#######################
## set up Formula with a single '.'
F3 <- Formula(y1 | y2 ~ .)
mf3 <- model.frame(F3, data = dat)
## without y1 or y2
model.matrix(F3, data = mf3)
## without y1 but with y2
model.matrix(F3, data = mf3, lhs = 1)
## without y2 but with y1
model.matrix(F3, data = mf3, lhs = 2)
## set up Formula with multiple '.'
F3 <- Formula(y1 | y2 | log(y3) ~ . - x3 - x4 | .)
## process both '.' separately (default)
mf3 <- model.frame(F3, data = dat, dot = "separate")
## only x1-x2
model.part(F3, data = mf3, rhs = 1)
## all x1-x4
model.part(F3, data = mf3, rhs = 2)
## process the '.' sequentially, i.e., the second RHS conditional on the first
mf3 <- model.frame(F3, data = dat, dot = "sequential")
## only x1-x2
model.part(F3, data = mf3, rhs = 1)
## only x3-x4
model.part(F3, data = mf3, rhs = 2)
## process the second '.' using the previous RHS element
mf3 <- model.frame(F3, data = dat, dot = "previous")
## only x1-x2
model.part(F3, data = mf3, rhs = 1)
## x1-x2 again
model.part(F3, data = mf3, rhs = 2)
##############################
## Process multiple offsets ##
##############################
## set up Formula
F4 <- Formula(y1 ~ x3 + offset(x1) | x4 + offset(log(x2)))
mf4 <- model.frame(F4, data = dat)
## model.part can be applied as above and includes offset!
model.part(F4, data = mf4, rhs = 1)
## additionally, the corresponding corresponding terms can be included
model.part(F4, data = mf4, rhs = 1, terms = TRUE)
## hence model.offset() can be applied to extract offsets
model.offset(model.part(F4, data = mf4, rhs = 1, terms = TRUE))
model.offset(model.part(F4, data = mf4, rhs = 2, terms = TRUE))