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Abstract
This vignette is an introduction to the package
groupdata2
.
groupdata2
is a set of methods for easy grouping,
windowing, folding, partitioning, splitting and balancing of data.
For a more extensive description of groupdata2
, please
see Description of
groupdata2
Contact author at r-pkgs@ludvigolsen.dk
When working with data you sometimes want to divide it into groups and subgroups for processing or descriptive statistics. It can help reduce the amount of information, allowing you to compare measurements on different scales - e.g. income per year instead of per month.
groupdata2
is a set of tools for creating groups from
your data. It consists of six, easy to use, main functions, namely
group_factor()
, group()
, splt()
,
partition()
, fold()
, and
balance()
.
group_factor() is at the heart of it all. It creates
the groups and is used by the other functions. It returns a grouping
factor with group numbers, i.e. 1s for all elements in group 1, 2s for
group 2, etc. So if you ask it to create 2 groups from a
vector
('Hans', 'Dorte', 'Mikkel', 'Leif')
it
will return a factor (1, 1, 2, 2)
.
group() takes in either a data frame
or
vector
and returns a data frame
with a
grouping factor added to it. The data frame
is grouped by
the grouping factor (using dplyr::group_by
), which makes it
very easy to use in dplyr
/magrittr
pipelines.
If, for instance, you have a column in a data frame
with
quarterly measurements, and you would like to see the average
measurement per year, you can simply create groups with a size of 4, and
take the mean of each group, all within a 3-line pipeline.
splt() takes in either a data frame
or
vector
, creates a grouping factor, and splits the given
data by this factor using base::split
. Often it will be
faster to use group()
instead of splt()
. I
also find it easier to work with the output of group()
.
partition() creates (optionally) balanced partitions (e.g. train/test sets) from given group sizes. It can balance partitions on one categorical variable and/or one numerical variable. It is able to keep all datapoints with a shared ID in the same partition.
fold() creates (optionally) balanced folds for cross-validation. It can balance folds on one categorical variable and/or one numerical variable. It is able to keep all datapoints with a shared ID in the same fold.
balance() uses up- or downsampling to fix the size of all groups to the min, max, mean, or median group size or to a specific number of rows. Balancing can also happen on the ID level, e.g. to ensure the same number of IDs in each category.
I came up with too many use cases to present them all neatly in one vignette. To give each example more space I instead aim to create vignettes for each of them. For now, these are the available vignettes dealing with each their topic:
Cross-validation with
groupdata2
In this vignette, we go through the basics of cross-validation, such as
creating balanced train/test sets with partition()
and
balanced folds with fold()
. We also write up a simple
cross-validation function and compare multiple linear regression
models.
Time series with
groupdata2
In this vignette, we divide up a time series into groups (windows) and
subgroups using group()
with the greedy
and
staircase
methods. We do some basic descriptive stats of
each group and use them to reduce the data size.
Automatic groups with
groupdata2
In this vignette, we will use the l_starts
method with
group()
to allow transferring of information from one
dataset to another. We will use the automatic grouping function that
finds group starts all by itself.
For a more extensive description of the features in
groupdata2
, see Description of groupdata2.
Well done, you made it to the end of this introduction to
groupdata2
! If you want to know more about the various
methods and arguments, you can read the Description of groupdata2.
If you have any questions or comments to this vignette (tutorial) or
groupdata2
, please send them to me at
r-pkgs@ludvigolsen.dk, or open an issue on the github
page https://github.com/LudvigOlsen/groupdata2 so I can make
improvements.
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.