MichaelChirico

Feb 1, 2019 09:48
Look at mydata[ , table(rowid(ID))]
 

 GMTs

General chat. Please read the FAQ for the rules or if you want...
Apr 14, 2016 14:31
@Arun go for it!
Apr 13, 2016 15:05
@Frank thanks, though i'm definitely not the first one to come up with that
Apr 13, 2016 15:00
thanks Frank
Apr 13, 2016 14:58
dupe
Apr 13, 2016 14:58
-1
Q: Apply multiple ifelse in R data.frame

user3253470I have a data.frame in R as follows: > head(New)[,12:13] Acc.N1 Acc.N2 1 NA 0 2 1 0 3 1 1 4 0 1 5 1 NA 6 NA 1 I want to add a new column to the existing data.frame named "Rank" which have values based on following assupmtions: if Ac...

Apr 10, 2016 19:57
@Arun my first stab at using non-equi joins, I'm a bit confused by the need to use `date = date + 2` at the end; also would be nice to use `on = .(date >= date - 2, date <= date)` instead of defining placeholder columns.

But is this sort of thing what you have in mind for this feature?
Apr 10, 2016 19:55
2
Q: Count of unique values in a rolling date range for R

IsaacThis question already has an answer for SQL, and I was able to implement that solution in R using sqldf. However, I've been unable to find a way to implement it using data.table. The problem is to count the distinct values of one column within a rolling date range, e.g. (and quoting directly f...

Apr 7, 2016 18:50
Still, fwiw %inRanges% hurts my eyes
Apr 7, 2016 18:45
and a huge pain that base switches arbitrarily among all the rules
Apr 7, 2016 18:44
personally hate camel case
Apr 7, 2016 18:43
%in.ranges%? I still like separation...
Apr 7, 2016 18:43
@Frank true. never thought of that.
Apr 7, 2016 18:42
@Frank what about %in_ranges%? :-p
Apr 7, 2016 18:41
@DavidArenburg gotta match the earrings
Apr 7, 2016 18:39
like a parody of a hadley package, but it's a real thing
Apr 7, 2016 18:38
@DavidArenburg lol
Apr 7, 2016 18:35
But looks like you can't copy-paste with all those >>> everywhere >:(
Apr 7, 2016 18:23
@Frank exactly, I think that's my preferred choice. Evokes coverings from real analysis.
Apr 7, 2016 18:22
to me all of those sound better when reading the code, and so help elucidate what the function is doing
Apr 7, 2016 18:21
@Arun possible alternative names:

`%in_ranges%` / `%in_range%`
`%covered_by%`
`%found_in%`
`%in_any%`
Apr 7, 2016 17:56
@ProcrastinatusMaximus wow, over 20x speed-up using feather. Maybe add that as a separate answer, and I'll incorporate it to my benchmarks?
Apr 7, 2016 17:43
github.com/wesm/feather this is the one?
Apr 7, 2016 17:42
@ProcrastinatusMaximus thanks for the suggestion, never heard of feather, exploring now...
Apr 7, 2016 17:42
looks a bit clunky, but it takes some time to run so it's a bit tough to fine-tune
Apr 7, 2016 17:41
@jangorecki @Arun updated with an attempt at showing scale-up: stackoverflow.com/a/36465497/3576984
Apr 7, 2016 02:35
seem like a reasonable benchmark to everyone? @Arun @jangorecki at least on this test fwrite is basically as fast as base save! I'm quite impressed by that.
Apr 7, 2016 02:34
0
A: Speeding up the performance of write.table

MichaelChiricoHot of the presses we've got a new contender -- fwrite has just been added to the data.table package's development version (1.9.7; a push of 1.9.8 to CRAN is expected in the near future, but check here for instructions to install dev for now) thanks to the hard work of Otto Seiskari. It performs...

Apr 7, 2016 00:20
@Frank honestly I'd just do a grid search on the contiguous problem... only nC2/2 possibilities then, about 1e4 for his example
Apr 6, 2016 18:51
happy to hear what's wrong, nothing better than learning something from posting a misguided answer :)
Apr 6, 2016 18:50
@eddi newbie question, i'm feeling nice so don't want to scare him off :)
Apr 6, 2016 18:00
@eddi is this answer salvageable? or just delete...
Apr 3, 2016 18:00
lol'd at this
Apr 3, 2016 18:00
Yes. [1] [2] ... — Loy 7 mins ago
Apr 1, 2016 22:40
@Frank thanks for the heads up. I only needed one line thankfully!
Apr 1, 2016 22:36
@jangorecki haha i love my %+% as paste0 though :p
Apr 1, 2016 21:22
Yea, I thought set as well, but have never used that with a merge
Apr 1, 2016 21:10
up through 10^3, times are in nanoseconds
Apr 1, 2016 21:10
all the time is spent in allocating the huge object, i guess
Apr 1, 2016 21:09
anyway, when your sequence is long enough for it to matter, there's no difference, basically
Apr 1, 2016 21:09
Apr 1, 2016 21:09
Hmm it was jumping around, too few repetitions...
Apr 1, 2016 21:07
@jangorecki care to elaborate on disdain for parse? especially when the objects are as simple as column names
Apr 1, 2016 21:06
@Frank lazy friday =P
Apr 1, 2016 21:05
Apr 1, 2016 20:56
1:length(x) is faster... but yea hopefully marginal
Apr 1, 2016 20:53
@Frank thanks for the pointer. I've always wondered since it's slower
Apr 1, 2016 19:44
or when i made a mistake defining a column (not an error, since the code runs), but the class is wrong... then try to correct the mistake without removing the column first