Following advice found here, I would like to request the re-opening of this question.
Reason: it is not a duplicate as the OP was not asking how to merge 2 data frames (they knew of the merge()
function). Rather, they were getting an error message because they were applying that function to contingency tables.
So the issue was not about how to merge data frames, but about a confusion between data frames (commonly called "tables", hence the possible confusion of the OP who may have used as.table()
in an attempt to create such "tables"), matrices (the OP created matrices when creating the data in the first place, which might be appropriate in their workflow, but may also be due to a lack of awareness about data frames), and contingency tables.
I was just about to post an answer clarifying all this when the question got closed. I feel that it would be worth reopening it as there may be other new R users having similar confusions (and in any event, it is simply not a duplicate of the question linked to it).
Edit
I keep getting downvotes. So I would like to add that the 2 questions look superficially very similar but if you look closely at, or run, the OP's code, you can see what their problem is. And that it is not at all about not knowing how to merge 2 data frames (which was the problem in the first question): the OP knew about the merge()
function in this case. Rather, their problem is a confusion between data frames (commonly referred to as "tables" in common language, the very word used in the first question), and contingency tables, which have nothing to do with it and which the OP is creating with as.table()
in a totally inappropriate context, which is the cause of this 2nd, very different issue. We call data frames "tables" but data frames are not at all created by the function as.table()
. That function creates contingency tables. See my comments below for more details.
Also, as @Tiny Giant pointed out, the 1st question and its answers can do nothing to help the OP in this case. The OP found a solution thanks to a comment posted below their question. But this comment does not clarify the confusion and is not the best answer to the problem. I tried to answer in further comments, but this different problem deserves real answers. And not to be answered in comments because it was inappropriately closed.
So, if I may, I would like you to please have a close look at the code (ideally with some understanding of R) before jumping to the conclusion that the second question is a duplicate because it looks superficially similar.
merge()
function), while this question is about someone who knew about themerge()
function, but is having confusion about the very concept of data frames. They usedas.table()
because we commonly call data frames "tables", but whatas.table()
does is to coerce an object into a contingency table (so an object that has nothing to do with a data frame). So the problems (and hence the appropriate replies) are totally differentas.table()
(so data frames called "tables" in common language, which is also the vocabulary used in the first question and contingency tables)