There's a handy ntile
function in package dplyr
. It's flexible in the sense that you can very easily define the number of *tiles or "bins" you want to create.
Load the package (install first if you haven't) and add the quartile column:
library(dplyr)
temp$quartile <- ntile(temp$value, 4)
Or, if you want to use dplyr syntax:
temp <- temp %>% mutate(quartile = ntile(value, 4))
Result in both cases is:
temp
# name value quartile
#1 a -0.56047565 1
#2 b -0.23017749 2
#3 c 1.55870831 4
#4 d 0.07050839 2
#5 e 0.12928774 3
#6 f 1.71506499 4
#7 g 0.46091621 3
#8 h -1.26506123 1
#9 i -0.68685285 1
#10 j -0.44566197 2
#11 k 1.22408180 4
#12 l 0.35981383 3
data:
Note that you don't need to create the "quartile" column in advance and use set.seed
to make the randomization reproducible:
set.seed(123)
temp <- data.frame(name=letters[1:12], value=rnorm(12))
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