sqldf: query data by range of dates

倾然丶 夕夏残阳落幕 提交于 2019-12-01 16:53:14

strftime strftime with percent codes is used to convert an object already regarded by sqlite as a datetime to something else but you want the reverse so the approach in the question is not going to work. For example, here we convert the current time into a dd-mm-yyyy string:

library(sqldf)
sqldf("select strftime('%d-%m-%Y', 'now') now")
##          now
## 1 07-09-2014

Discussion Since SQlite lacks date types its a bit onerous to handle this, particularly with the 1-or-2-digit non-standard date formats, but if you really want to use SQLite we can do it by tediously parsing out the date strings. Using fn$ from the gsubfn package for string interpolation eases this a little.

Code Below zero2d outputs SQL code to prepend a zero character to its input if its one digit. rmSlash outputs SQL code to remove any slashes in its argument. Year, Month and Day each output SQL code to take a character string representing a date in the format under discussion and extract the indicated component reformatting it as a 2 digit zero filled character string in the case of Month and Day. fmtDate takes a character string of the form shown in the question for first_string and second_string and outputs a yyyy-mm-dd character string.

library(sqldf)
library(gsubfn)

zero2d <- function(x) sprintf("substr('0' || %s, -2)", x)

rmSlash <- function(x) sprintf("replace(%s, '/', '')", x)

Year <- function(x) sprintf("substr(%s, -4)", x)

Month <- function(x) {
   y <- sprintf("substr(%s, instr(%s, '/') + 1, 2)", x, x)
   zero2d(rmSlash(y))
}

Day <- function(x) {
   y <- sprintf("substr(%s, 1, 2)", x)
   zero2d(rmSlash(y))
}

fmtDate <- function(x) format(as.Date(x))

sql <- "select * from df2 where 
  `Year('Date')` || '-' || 
  `Month('Date')` || '-' || 
  `Day('Date')`
  between '`fmtDate(first_date)`' and '`fmtDate(second_date)`'"
fn$sqldf(sql)

giving:

       Date
1 1/11/2001
2 1/12/2002
3 1/11/2003

Notes

1) SQLite functions used instr, replace and substr are core sqlite functions

2) SQL The actual SQL statement that is executed after fn$ performs the substitutions is as follows (slightly reformatted to fit):

> cat( fn$identity(sql), "\n")
select * from df2 where 
  substr(Date, -4) 
  || '-' || 
  substr('0' || replace(substr(Date, instr(Date, '/') + 1, 2), '/', ''), -2) 
  || '-' || 
  substr('0' || replace(substr(Date, 1, 2), '/', ''), -2)
  between '2001-11-01' and '2003-11-01' 

3) source of complications the main complication is the non-standard 1-or-2 digit day and month. Had they been consistently 2 digits it would have reduced to this:

first_date <- "2001-11-01"
second_date <- ""2003-11-01"

fn$sqldf("select Date from df2 
   where substr(Date, -4) || '-' || 
         substr(Date, 4, 2) || '-' ||
         substr(Date, 1, 2)
   between '`first_date`' and '`second_date`' ")

4) H2 Here is an H2 solution. H2 does have a datetime type simplifying the solution substantially over SQLite. We assume that the data is in a file called mydata.dat. Note that read.csv.sql does not support H2 as H2 already has the internal csvread SQL function to do that:

library(RH2)
library(sqldf)

first_date <- "2001-11-01"
second_date <- "2003-11-01"

fn$sqldf(c("CREATE TABLE t(DATE TIMESTAMP) AS
  SELECT parsedatetime(DATE, 'd/M/y') as DATE
  FROM CSVREAD('mydata.dat')", 
  "SELECT DATE FROM t WHERE DATE between '`first_date`' and '`second_date`'"))

Note that the first RH2 query will be slow in a session since it loads java. After that you can try it out to see if the performance is adequate.

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