I have two data.frames that I want to merge together. The first is:
datess <- seq(as.Date(\'2005-01-01\'), as.Date(\'2009-12-31\'), \'days\')
sample<-
So far, three different approaches have been posted:
There is a fourth approach called update join suggested by Frank in chat:
library(data.table)
setDT(sample)[, yr := year(Date)][setDT(a), on = .(yr = a), `:=`(y = i.y, Z = i.Z)]
which turned out to be the fastest and most concise of the four.
To decide which of the approaches is the most efficient in terms of speed I've set up a benchmark using the microbenchmark
package.
Unit: microseconds
expr min lq mean median uq max neval
create_data 248.827 291.116 316.240 302.0655 323.588 665.298 100
match 4488.685 4545.701 4752.226 4649.5355 4810.763 6881.418 100
dplyr 6086.609 6275.588 6513.997 6385.2760 6625.229 8535.979 100
merge 2871.883 2942.490 3183.712 3004.6025 3168.096 5616.898 100
update_join 1484.272 1545.063 1710.651 1659.8480 1733.476 3434.102 100
As sample
is modified it has to be created anew before each benchmark run. This is been done by a function which is included in the benchmark as well (create data). The times for create data need to be subtracted from the other timings.
So, even for the small data set of about 1800 rows, update join is the fastest, nearly twice as fast as the second merge, followed by match, and dplyr being last, more than 4 times slower than update join (with the time for create data subtracted).
datess <- seq(as.Date('2005-01-01'), as.Date('2009-12-31'), 'days')
a <- data.frame(Z = c(1, 3, 4, 5, 2),
a = 2005:2009,
y = c('abc', 'def', 'ijk', 'xyz', 'thanks'),
stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
setDT(a)
make_sample <- function() data.frame(Date = datess, y = NA_character_, Z = NA_real_)
library(data.table)
library(magrittr)
microbenchmark::microbenchmark(
create_data = make_sample(),
match = {
sample <- make_sample()
matched<-match(format(sample$Date,"%Y"),a$a)
sample$y<-a$y[matched]
sample$Z<-a$Z[matched]
},
dplyr = {
sample <- make_sample()
sample <- sample %>%
dplyr::mutate(a = format(Date, "%Y") %>% as.numeric) %>%
dplyr::inner_join(a %>% dplyr::select(a), by = "a")
},
merge = {
sample <- make_sample()
sample2 <- data.frame(Date = datess)
sample2$a <- lubridate::year(sample2$Date)
sample <- base::merge(sample2, a, by="a")
},
update_join = {
sample <- make_sample()
setDT(sample)[, yr := year(Date)][a, on = .(yr = a), `:=`(y = i.y, Z = i.Z)]
}
)
You can use match
matched<-match(format(sample$Date,"%Y"),a$a)
sample$y<-a$y[matched]
sample$Z<-a$Z[matched]
Is there anything speaking against having a column with year in your new df? If not you could generate one in 'sample' and use the merge function
require(lubridate) #to make generating the year easy
sample2<-data.frame(Date=datess)
sample2$a<-year(sample2$Date)
df<-merge(sample2,a,by="a")
this will result in something like this:
head(df)
a Date y Z
1 2005 2005-01-01 abc 1
2 2005 2005-01-02 abc 1
3 2005 2005-01-03 abc 1
4 2005 2005-01-04 abc 1
5 2005 2005-01-05 abc 1
6 2005 2005-01-06 abc 1
You could then remove the year column again if it bothers you.
If y
and Z
are always zero in sample
you do not need them there, so all you have to do is join on year like this:
library(dplyr)
sample %>% mutate(a = format(Date, "%Y") %>% as.numeric) %>%
inner_join(a %>% select(a))