How to round up to the nearest 10 (or 100 or X)?
I am writing a function to plot data. I would like to specify a nice round number for the y-axis max
that is greater than the max of the dataset.
Specifically, I would like a function foo
that performs the following:
foo(4) == 5
foo(6.1) == 10 #maybe 7 would be better
foo(30.1) == 40
foo(100.1) == 110
I have gotten as far as
foo <- function(x) ceiling(max(x)/10)*10
for rounding to the nearest 10, but this does not work for arbitrary rounding intervals.
I开发者_开发百科s there a better way to do this in R?
The plyr
library has a function round_any
that is pretty generic to do all kinds of rounding. For example
library(plyr)
round_any(132.1, 10) # returns 130
round_any(132.1, 10, f = ceiling) # returns 140
round_any(132.1, 5, f = ceiling) # returns 135
If you just want to round up to the nearest power of 10, then just define:
roundUp <- function(x) 10^ceiling(log10(x))
This actually also works when x is a vector:
> roundUp(c(0.0023, 3.99, 10, 1003))
[1] 1e-02 1e+01 1e+01 1e+04
..but if you want to round to a "nice" number, you first need to define what a "nice" number is. The following lets us define "nice" as a vector with nice base values from 1 to 10. The default is set to the even numbers plus 5.
roundUpNice <- function(x, nice=c(1,2,4,5,6,8,10)) {
if(length(x) != 1) stop("'x' must be of length 1")
10^floor(log10(x)) * nice[[which(x <= 10^floor(log10(x)) * nice)[[1]]]]
}
The above doesn't work when x is a vector - too late in the evening right now :)
> roundUpNice(0.0322)
[1] 0.04
> roundUpNice(3.22)
[1] 4
> roundUpNice(32.2)
[1] 40
> roundUpNice(42.2)
[1] 50
> roundUpNice(422.2)
[1] 500
[[EDIT]]
If the question is how to round to a specified nearest value (like 10 or 100), then James answer seems most appropriate. My version lets you take any value and automatically round it to a reasonably "nice" value. Some other good choices of the "nice" vector above are: 1:10, c(1,5,10), seq(1, 10, 0.1)
If you have a range of values in your plot, for example [3996.225, 40001.893]
then the automatic way should take into account both the size of the range and the magnitude of the numbers. And as noted by Hadley, the pretty()
function might be what you want.
The round function in R assigns special meaning to the digits parameter if it is negative.
round(x, digits = 0)
Rounding to a negative number of digits means rounding to a power of ten, so for example round(x, digits = -2) rounds to the nearest hundred.
This means a function like the following gets pretty close to what you are asking for.
foo <- function(x)
{
round(x+5,-1)
}
The output looks like the following
foo(4)
[1] 10
foo(6.1)
[1] 10
foo(30.1)
[1] 40
foo(100.1)
[1] 110
If you add a negative number to the digits-argument of round(), R will round it to the multiples of 10, 100 etc.
round(9, digits = -1)
[1] 10
round(89, digits = -1)
[1] 90
round(89, digits = -2)
[1] 100
How about:
roundUp <- function(x,to=10)
{
to*(x%/%to + as.logical(x%%to))
}
Which gives:
> roundUp(c(4,6.1,30.1,100.1))
[1] 10 10 40 110
> roundUp(4,5)
[1] 5
> roundUp(12,7)
[1] 14
Round ANY number Up/Down to ANY interval
You can easily round numbers to a specific interval using the modulo operator %%
.
The function:
round.choose <- function(x, roundTo, dir = 1) {
if(dir == 1) { ##ROUND UP
x + (roundTo - x %% roundTo)
} else {
if(dir == 0) { ##ROUND DOWN
x - (x %% roundTo)
}
}
}
Examples:
> round.choose(17,5,1) #round 17 UP to the next 5th
[1] 20
> round.choose(17,5,0) #round 17 DOWN to the next 5th
[1] 15
> round.choose(17,2,1) #round 17 UP to the next even number
[1] 18
> round.choose(17,2,0) #round 17 DOWN to the next even number
[1] 16
How it works:
The modulo operator %%
determines the remainder of dividing the first number by the 2nd. Adding or subtracting this interval to your number of interest can essentially 'round' the number to an interval of your choosing.
> 7 + (5 - 7 %% 5) #round UP to the nearest 5
[1] 10
> 7 + (10 - 7 %% 10) #round UP to the nearest 10
[1] 10
> 7 + (2 - 7 %% 2) #round UP to the nearest even number
[1] 8
> 7 + (100 - 7 %% 100) #round UP to the nearest 100
[1] 100
> 7 + (4 - 7 %% 4) #round UP to the nearest interval of 4
[1] 8
> 7 + (4.5 - 7 %% 4.5) #round UP to the nearest interval of 4.5
[1] 9
> 7 - (7 %% 5) #round DOWN to the nearest 5
[1] 5
> 7 - (7 %% 10) #round DOWN to the nearest 10
[1] 0
> 7 - (7 %% 2) #round DOWN to the nearest even number
[1] 6
Update:
The convenient 2-argument version:
rounder <- function(x,y) {
if(y >= 0) { x + (y - x %% y)}
else { x - (x %% abs(y))}
}
Positive y
values roundUp
, while negative y
values roundDown
:
# rounder(7, -4.5) = 4.5, while rounder(7, 4.5) = 9.
Or....
Function that automatically rounds UP or DOWN based on standard rounding rules:
Round <- function(x,y) {
if((y - x %% y) <= x %% y) { x + (y - x %% y)}
else { x - (x %% y)}
}
Automatically rounds up if the x
value is >
halfway between subsequent instances of the rounding value y
:
# Round(1.3,1) = 1 while Round(1.6,1) = 2
# Round(1.024,0.05) = 1 while Round(1.03,0.05) = 1.05
Regarding the rounding up to the multiplicity of an arbitrary number, e.g. 10, here is a simple alternative to James's answer.
It works for any real number being rounded up (from
) and any real positive number rounded up to (to
):
> RoundUp <- function(from,to) ceiling(from/to)*to
Example:
> RoundUp(-11,10)
[1] -10
> RoundUp(-0.1,10)
[1] 0
> RoundUp(0,10)
[1] 0
> RoundUp(8.9,10)
[1] 10
> RoundUp(135,10)
[1] 140
> RoundUp(from=c(1.3,2.4,5.6),to=1.1)
[1] 2.2 3.3 6.6
If you always want to round a number up to the nearest X, you can use the ceiling
function:
#Round 354 up to the nearest 100:
> X=100
> ceiling(354/X)*X
[1] 400
#Round 47 up to the nearest 30:
> Y=30
> ceiling(47/Y)*Y
[1] 60
Similarly, if you always want to round down, use the floor
function. If you want to simply round up or down to the nearest Z, use round
instead.
> Z=5
> round(367.8/Z)*Z
[1] 370
> round(367.2/Z)*Z
[1] 365
I think your code just works great with a small modification:
foo <- function(x, round=10) ceiling(max(x+10^-9)/round + 1/round)*round
And your examples run:
> foo(4, round=1) == 5
[1] TRUE
> foo(6.1) == 10 #maybe 7 would be better
[1] TRUE
> foo(6.1, round=1) == 7 # you got 7
[1] TRUE
> foo(30.1) == 40
[1] TRUE
> foo(100.1) == 110
[1] TRUE
> # ALL in one:
> foo(c(4, 6.1, 30.1, 100))
[1] 110
> foo(c(4, 6.1, 30.1, 100), round=10)
[1] 110
> foo(c(4, 6.1, 30.1, 100), round=2.3)
[1] 101.2
I altered your function in two way:
- added second argument (for your specified X )
- added a small value (
=1e-09
, feel free to modify!) to themax(x)
if you want a bigger number
This rounds x
up to the nearest integer multiple of y
when y
is positive and down when y
is negative:
rom=\(x,y)x+(y-x%%y)%%y
rom(8.69,.1) # 8.7
rom(8.69,-.1) # 8.6
rom(8.69,.25) # 8.75
rom(8.69,-.25) # 8.5
rom(-8.69,.25) # -8.5
This always rounds to the nearest multiple like round_any
in plyr
(https://github.com/hadley/plyr/blob/34188a04f0e33c4115304cbcf40e5b1c7b85fedf/R/round-any.r):
rnm=\(x,y)round(x/y)*y
rnm(8.69,.25) # 8.75
plyr::round_any(8.69,.25) # 8.75
round_any
can also be given ceiling
as the third argument to always round up or floor
to always round down:
plyr::round_any(8.51,.25,ceiling) # 8.75
plyr::round_any(8.69,.25,floor) # 8.5
You will find an upgraded version of Tommy's answer that takes into account several cases:
- Choosing between lower or higher bound
- Taking into account negative and zero values
- two different nice scale in case you want the function to round differently small and big numbers. Example: 4 would be rounded at 0 while 400 would be rounded at 400.
Below the code :
round.up.nice <- function(x, lower_bound = TRUE, nice_small=c(0,5,10), nice_big=c(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10)) {
if (abs(x) > 100) {
nice = nice_big
} else {
nice = nice_small
}
if (lower_bound == TRUE) {
if (x > 0) {
return(10^floor(log10(x)) * nice[[max(which(x >= 10^floor(log10(x)) * nice))[[1]]]])
} else if (x < 0) {
return(- 10^floor(log10(-x)) * nice[[min(which(-x <= 10^floor(log10(-x)) * nice))[[1]]]])
} else {
return(0)
}
} else {
if (x > 0) {
return(10^floor(log10(x)) * nice[[min(which(x <= 10^floor(log10(x)) * nice))[[1]]]])
} else if (x < 0) {
return(- 10^floor(log10(-x)) * nice[[max(which(-x >= 10^floor(log10(-x)) * nice))[[1]]]])
} else {
return(0)
}
}
}
I tried this without using any external library or cryptic features and it works!
Hope it helps someone.
ceil <- function(val, multiple){
div = val/multiple
int_div = as.integer(div)
return (int_div * multiple + ceiling(div - int_div) * multiple)
}
> ceil(2.1, 2.2)
[1] 2.2
> ceil(3, 2.2)
[1] 4.4
> ceil(5, 10)
[1] 10
> ceil(0, 10)
[1] 0
Might be missing something but is it not as easy as:
some_number = 789
1000 * round(some_number/1000, 0)
to produce something rounded to 1000s?
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