@DavidArenburg Simple matter of verification, I would guess. If I can look at an answer and not even have to run it to figure out if it's correct or makes sense, the cognitive load required to decide whether to up-vote it or not is very low, so my action comes quickly....
How do I generate a data.frame from scratch?
For instance, how would I generate a data.frame called "abc" that contains the letters from "a" to "j" in the first column and the numbers from 10 to 1 in the second column? What if I wanted to specify the column names in the process, for example, cal...
@BenBolker proposed that this not be closed, so I edited the question to make it seem less like homework, in case anyone else agrees with his perspective and wants to vote to reopen.
@Arun the main difference here from base R (I would guess) is that in base R you can do both mtcars[, "vs"] or mtcars[, taerget] and they both will be evaluated within mtcars environment. The fact that you can't do anything even close with data.table is quite surprising. In my opinion it would more convenient if the syntax was the same is data.frame. It seems that the little gain of not quoting j expression is not worth IMO
I also don't think that .SD[[.]] should be idiomatic. Why would you call a whole data.table in each iteration just in order to evaluate a column name? That doesn't make any sense to me neither
@DavidArenburg I don't understand.. You can do DT[, cols, with=FALSE]. What you're doing is a grouping operation, and you're passing a column name to an expression.. What's the equivalent of that in base R?
@DavidArenburg it is the most idiomatic way I could think of without going through the hoops of creating an expression. And no, if/when it's optimised you wouldn't be constructing the entire data.table internally. How would you do it?
@Arun I'm well aware of , with = FALSE. The problem that I see here that the evaluation within j expression is somewhat confusing. consider the following
How would sum(x == y) in both cases know whether you're referring to a column x in dt or a column that is stored as a character in x and that character value is a column in dt?
@Arun It won't work of course because base doesn't have by argument, neither it uses := within a data.frame. Though the column evaluation part works the same for if it was mtcars[, "vs"] or mtcars[, newcol]
Seems like there's some confusion here. I'll rephrase. How will you get the result you expect from sum(oldcol == value) using base R, when oldcol is a character vector that holds a column name in dt/df?
@Arun I'm not sure I follow. I would thing of it as a lazy evaluation process. If data.table has column name called oldcol it will use it. If not, if will look for it in the parent environment. Isn't this what data.frame does in base R?
I feel like we're going in circles. Why do you expect sum(oldcol == value) to work the same way as sum(vs == value)?
oldcol is not a column in dt. So you've to construct an expression and evaluate it. And this is how you'd do it in base R as well. So, I don't understand what's messed up / surprising...!!
How are we to figure out if you're looking for a column in dt or a character vector that's a column in dt stored in another variable, or it's a plain typo...?
@Arun ? I don't understand you. All I expect is to first look for oldcol within dt, if not found, look for it in the parent environment and evaluate it, just like you do in dt[, oldcol, with = FALSE]...
My question is: how do we know whether you want the character vector as such, or to get the values for the column stored in dt if such a column exists..?
Ok, that is a good question. There are two possible answers. If we want to follow the base R convention, you will never take the values, rather only check if it contains a column name. The other option would be: Check if this vector is only contains 1 value and then check if its a column name within dt, otherwise take the whole vector
I'm not sure I follow. The j argument only accepts column names or numbers.. and since you've provided a symbol, it evaluates it to find the value in it, and that turns out to be a character vector, and therefore you get the desired result.
Does with(dt, sum(oldcol == 1)) return the result you expect in base R?
I think I understand your confusion. Let me try and figure out how to explain it..
@Arun It probably is, as with(mtcars, sum(oldcol == 1)) will do the same, as with isn't evaluating anything outside its environment. Hmmm, it seem to be able to evaluate value though..
@DavidArenburg why do you think it doesn't look for variables in the parent environment? If it didn't look then you'd get an error that oldcol is not found in mtcars.
compare with(mtcars, sum(oldcol == 1)) with with(mtcars, sum(oldcol2 == 1)).
I think your confusion is similar to this issue. x = "vs"; vs = 1:5; x == 5. Here the function (==) is designed to look for a binding x in that environment, and if one exists, compare those values against 5. Changing the behaviour here to look for the value in x if it's not a numeric and compare those values (1:5) implicitly is dangerous IMO.
oldcol contains vs and that column is subsetted. What you're asking is for the value contained in vs. Ex: x contains vs.. and you want the value in vs = 1:5 (and you want that implicitly).
Here's another example: vs = "mpg"; oldcol = "vs"; mtcars[, oldcol] what do you expect to be the result?
@Arun The result is what I would expect. I don't think we can get to agreement here, neither I think you will change the whole data.table structure just because of my opinion. But thanks for your time and some interesting discussion
@Arun It is funny that a similar question was just asked about dplyr evaluation of its column names when passed as variables into the group_by_ funciton and in this case data.table alternative absolutely rocks (I've added it into the answer ;))
David, I see your problem / confusion as a slightly different issue - i.e., yours is on "expressions" - ex: sum(x == .) and the way you'd like to interpret x depending on whether x is or is not a column in dt.
His is not on expressions, rather a function that is supposed to accept character vector of column names doesn't seem to be working as it should (my guess, I'm not sure).
But then, I'm not much familiar with the _ family of functions in dplyr and lazyeval. I find base R quite straightforward to operate really.