Here is my data set:
FullName <- c("Jimmy John Cephus", "Frank Chester", "Hank Chester", "Brody Buck Clyde", "Merle Rufus Roscoe Jed Quaid")
df <- data.frame(FullName)
Goal: Look into FullName for any spaces, " ", and extract out the FirstName.
My first step is to utilize the stringr library because I will utilize the str_count() and word() functions.
Next I test stringr::str_count(df$FullName, " ") against the df and R returns:
[1] 2 1 1 2 4
This is what I expect.
Next I test the word() function:
stringr::word(df$FullName, 1)
R returns:
[1] "Jimmy" "Frank" "Hank"  "Brody" "Merle"
Again, this is what I expect.
Next I construct a simple UDF (user defined function) that incorporates the str_count() function:
split_firstname = function(full_name){
  x <- stringr::str_count(full_name, " ")
  return(x)
}
split_firstname(df$FullName)
Again, R provides what I expect:
[1] 2 1 1 2 4
As a final step, I incorporate the word() function into the UDF and code for all of the conditions:
    split_firstname = function(full_name){
  x <- stringr::str_count(full_name, " ")
  if(x==1){
    return(stringr::word(full_name,1))
  }else if(x==2){
    return(paste(stringr::word(full_name,1), stringr::word(full_name,2), sep = " "))
  }else if(x==4){
    return(paste(stringr::word(full_name,1), stringr::word(full_name,2), stringr::word(full_name,3), stringr::word(full_name,4), sep = " "))
  }
}
Then I call the UDF and pass to it the FullName from the df:
split_firstname(df$FullName)
This time I did NOT get what I expected, R returned:
[1] "Jimmy John"    "Frank Chester" "Hank Chester"  "Brody Buck"    "Merle Rufus"  
Warning messages:
1: In if (x == 1) { :
  the condition has length > 1 and only the first element will be used
2: In if (x == 2) { :
  the condition has length > 1 and only the first element will be used
I had expected R to return to me the following:
"Jimmy John", "Frank", "Hank", "Brody Buck", "Merle Rufus Roscoe Jed"
the problem is that you are using an if-statement with a vector. This is not allowed and doesn't work as you would expect. You can use the case_when function from dplyr.
library(dplyr)
split_firstname <- function(full_name){
  x <- stringr::str_count(full_name, " ")
  case_when(
    x == 1 ~ stringr::word(full_name, 1),
    x == 2 ~ paste(stringr::word(full_name,1), stringr::word(full_name,2), sep = " "),
    x == 4 ~ paste(stringr::word(full_name,1), stringr::word(full_name,2), stringr::word(full_name,3), stringr::word(full_name,4), sep = " ")
  )
}
lukeA's answer is the best approach, but if you find you are unable to vectorise functions, sapply from base-r and rowwise from dplyr can solve this problem too
df$first <- sapply(df$FullName, split_firstname)
head(df)
                      FullName                  first
1            Jimmy John Cephus             Jimmy John
2                Frank Chester                  Frank
3                 Hank Chester                   Hank
4             Brody Buck Clyde             Brody Buck
5 Merle Rufus Roscoe Jed Quaid Merle Rufus Roscoe Jed
library(dplyr)
df <- df %>% rowwise() %>% 
  mutate(split2 = split_firstname(FullName))
head(df)
                      FullName                  first                 split2
                        <fctr>                  <chr>                  <chr>
1            Jimmy John Cephus             Jimmy John             Jimmy John
2                Frank Chester                  Frank                  Frank
3                 Hank Chester                   Hank                   Hank
4             Brody Buck Clyde             Brody Buck             Brody Buck
5 Merle Rufus Roscoe Jed Quaid Merle Rufus Roscoe Jed Merle Rufus Roscoe Jed
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