I just knew that 15+ years in the financial services industry would come in handy one day. I just did not know that today would be that day. My life is now complete.
@MatthewDowle Hi. I agree that question should be closed. I'd also like to have xts-stlye subsetting with data.table. @JoshuaUlrich, @MatthewDowle, make some magic happen please :-)
Ok. Does this mean 'give me all the data in the table between these dates' in xts? What if you want the prevailing observation for a regular series over that range?
Right, x['2011'] means give me all rows that are between 2011-01-01 00:00:00 and 2011-12-31 23:59:59.999. x[2011-01-01/2011-01-15'] means all rows between those 2 dates. I'm not 100% sure I follow the second question. Maybe @JoshuaUlrich can chime in?
Say you want the end of month price from daily data, where the key is (id,date), for a set of ids. The data.table way is to create your sequence of month ends using seq.Date or something, called monthends, then join to the data: DT[CJ(ids,monthends),roll=TRUE]. That's faster than grouping by month and taking the last one, and it deals with gaps etc. So the range string would be a nice way of building that in?
I very rarely want to get whatever data exists within a range. I tend to need a contemporaneous regular series across a set of assets. But to extract everything in the table between two points (in general) would list i join column work for you? : r-forge.r-project.org/tracker/…
But I think I get the gist. Will give it some thought. Thanks you and @JoshuaUlrich for confirm on that question linked above. Where do you see data.list?
Ah. That was either typo or maybe we talked about "data.list" back then 4 years ago. But yeah, it's supposed to mean just a list column in i joining to the date vector in x's key. You might want different ranges for different ids? Or you might want different ranges/windows for the same id. With the range being a column of the join table you could do things like that.
Ah. So, an xts object is a matrix with a sorted timeBased (i.e. Date, POSIXct, etc) index attribute. Since the "key" is always timeBased and sorted, and since the data are all of the same class (because it's a matrix), it simplifies some things. I was just thinking that if the "key" is timeBased and i is character, then it could be parsed for subsetting. But, that probably interferes with other uses for i which means the syntax may need to involve a join like you describe
@MatthewDowle, while you're here, I have a very simple data.table question. Given the following data.table, I want to divide the value NUM for "A" by the value of NUM for "B"
@GSee There are two Alex? I seem to remember an Alex and an alex, but I see that now when I hover how the name different reps come up. Hm! So could I create a new user and call my second self @JoshuaUlrich?
Heh heh. @GSee That's a great question. Answer: because by-without-by means that j runs for each row of i. Either set mult="first"|"last": DT[c("A","B"),NUM[1]/NUM[2],mult="first"] or set a dummy by: DT[c("A","B"),NUM[1]/NUM[2],by=NULL]
i have a data frame, which looks like this, but huge so I can't do anything manually:
Bank Country KeyItem Year Value
A AU Income 2010 1000
A AU Income 2011 1130
A AU Income 2012 1160
B USA Depth 2010 ...