dplyr mutate/replace several columns on a subset of rows
You can do this with magrittr
's two-way pipe %<>%
:
library(dplyr)
library(magrittr)
dt[dt$measure=="exit",] %<>% mutate(qty.exit = qty,
cf = 0,
delta.watts = 13)
This reduces the amount of typing, but is still much slower than data.table
.
These solutions (1) maintain the pipeline, (2) do not overwrite the input and (3) only require that the condition be specified once:
1a) mutate_cond Create a simple function for data frames or data tables that can be incorporated into pipelines. This function is like mutate
but only acts on the rows satisfying the condition:
mutate_cond <- function(.data, condition, ..., envir = parent.frame()) {
condition <- eval(substitute(condition), .data, envir)
.data[condition, ] <- .data[condition, ] %>% mutate(...)
.data
}
DF %>% mutate_cond(measure == 'exit', qty.exit = qty, cf = 0, delta.watts = 13)
1b) mutate_last This is an alternative function for data frames or data tables which again is like mutate
but is only used within group_by
(as in the example below) and only operates on the last group rather than every group. Note that TRUE > FALSE so if group_by
specifies a condition then mutate_last
will only operate on rows satisfying that condition.
mutate_last <- function(.data, ...) {
n <- n_groups(.data)
indices <- attr(.data, "indices")[[n]] + 1
.data[indices, ] <- .data[indices, ] %>% mutate(...)
.data
}
DF %>%
group_by(is.exit = measure == 'exit') %>%
mutate_last(qty.exit = qty, cf = 0, delta.watts = 13) %>%
ungroup() %>%
select(-is.exit)
2) factor out condition Factor out the condition by making it an extra column which is later removed. Then use ifelse
, replace
or arithmetic with logicals as illustrated. This also works for data tables.
library(dplyr)
DF %>% mutate(is.exit = measure == 'exit',
qty.exit = ifelse(is.exit, qty, qty.exit),
cf = (!is.exit) * cf,
delta.watts = replace(delta.watts, is.exit, 13)) %>%
select(-is.exit)
3) sqldf We could use SQL update
via the sqldf package in the pipeline for data frames (but not data tables unless we convert them -- this may represent a bug in dplyr. See dplyr issue 1579). It may seem that we are undesirably modifying the input in this code due to the existence of the update
but in fact the update
is acting on a copy of the input in the temporarily generated database and not on the actual input.
library(sqldf)
DF %>%
do(sqldf(c("update '.'
set 'qty.exit' = qty, cf = 0, 'delta.watts' = 13
where measure = 'exit'",
"select * from '.'")))
4) row_case_when Also check out row_case_when
defined in
Returning a tibble: how to vectorize with case_when? . It uses a syntax similar to case_when
but applies to rows.
library(dplyr)
DF %>%
row_case_when(
measure == "exit" ~ data.frame(qty.exit = qty, cf = 0, delta.watts = 13),
TRUE ~ data.frame(qty.exit, cf, delta.watts)
)
Note 1: We used this as DF
set.seed(1)
DF <- data.frame(site = sample(1:6, 50, replace=T),
space = sample(1:4, 50, replace=T),
measure = sample(c('cfl', 'led', 'linear', 'exit'), 50,
replace=T),
qty = round(runif(50) * 30),
qty.exit = 0,
delta.watts = sample(10.5:100.5, 50, replace=T),
cf = runif(50))
Note 2: The problem of how to easily specify updating a subset of rows is also discussed in dplyr issues 134, 631, 1518 and 1573 with 631 being the main thread and 1573 being a review of the answers here.