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This is a one-function package so that you can pass only unique values to a computationally expensive function that returns an output of the same length as the input.
In importing and working with tidy data, it is common to have index
columns, often including time stamps that are far from unique. Some
funcitons to work with these such as text conversion, various
grep()
-based functions, and often the cut()
function are relatively slow when working with tens of millions of rows
or more.
This wrapper function pares down the input vector to process to only
unique values using hte unique()
function, and in my
experience the unique()
and match()
functions
upon which calcUnique()
is based are so fast that only a
small amount of repition is necessary to make calcUnique the faster
option.
calcUnique()
is a wrapper for any function that takes in
a vector or list and returns a vector or list the same length. The
inputs and outputs are the same as they would be otherwise … it just
happens faster.
#Create a sample of some date text with repeats
<-
ts_sample sample(as.character(seq(
from = as.POSIXct('2020-03-01'),
to = as.POSIXct('2020-03-05'),
by = 'day'
)),size = 10, replace = TRUE)
ts_sample
## [1] "2020-03-01" "2020-03-02" "2020-03-02" "2020-03-02" "2020-03-04"
## [6] "2020-03-05" "2020-03-05" "2020-03-01" "2020-03-01" "2020-03-01"
#Now convert the time text back to POSIXct timestamps:
as.POSIXct(ts_sample)
## [1] "2020-03-01 MST" "2020-03-02 MST" "2020-03-02 MST" "2020-03-02 MST"
## [5] "2020-03-04 MST" "2020-03-05 MST" "2020-03-05 MST" "2020-03-01 MST"
## [9] "2020-03-01 MST" "2020-03-01 MST"
#Do the same with the calcUnique function:
calcUnique(ts_sample, as.POSIXct)
## [1] "2020-03-01 MST" "2020-03-02 MST" "2020-03-02 MST" "2020-03-02 MST"
## [5] "2020-03-04 MST" "2020-03-05 MST" "2020-03-05 MST" "2020-03-01 MST"
## [9] "2020-03-01 MST" "2020-03-01 MST"
#Just to show that the output is the same with and without calcUnique:
all.equal(as.POSIXct(ts_sample), calcUnique(ts_sample, as.POSIXct))
## [1] TRUE
#An example for when the function doesn't take the vector as the first argument:
gsub("03", "$3", ts_sample)
## [1] "2020-$3-01" "2020-$3-02" "2020-$3-02" "2020-$3-02" "2020-$3-04"
## [6] "2020-$3-05" "2020-$3-05" "2020-$3-01" "2020-$3-01" "2020-$3-01"
calcUnique(ts_sample, function(i) gsub("03", "$3", i))
## [1] "2020-$3-01" "2020-$3-02" "2020-$3-02" "2020-$3-02" "2020-$3-04"
## [6] "2020-$3-05" "2020-$3-05" "2020-$3-01" "2020-$3-01" "2020-$3-01"
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.