| Aggregate.coin | R Documentation |
Aggregates a named data set specified by dset using aggregation function(s) f_ag, weights w, and optional
function parameters f_ag_para. Note that COINr has a number of aggregation functions built in,
all of which are of the form a_*(), e.g. a_amean(), a_gmean() and friends.
## S3 method for class 'coin'
Aggregate(
x,
dset,
f_ag = NULL,
w = NULL,
f_ag_para = NULL,
dat_thresh = NULL,
by_df = FALSE,
out2 = "coin",
write_to = NULL,
...
)
x |
A coin class object. |
dset |
The name of the data set to apply the function to, which should be accessible in |
f_ag |
The name of an aggregation function, a string. This can either be a single string naming
a function to use for all aggregation levels, or else a character vector of function names of length |
w |
An optional data frame of weights. If |
f_ag_para |
Optional parameters to pass to |
dat_thresh |
An optional data availability threshold, specified as a number between 0 and 1. If a row
within an aggregation group has data availability lower than this threshold, the aggregated value for that row will be
|
by_df |
Controls whether to send a numeric vector to |
out2 |
Either |
write_to |
If specified, writes the aggregated data to |
... |
arguments passed to or from other methods. |
When by_df = FALSE, aggregation is performed row-wise using the function f_ag, such that for each row x_row, the output is
f_ag(x_row, f_ag_para), and for the whole data frame, it outputs a numeric vector. Otherwise if by_df = TRUE,
the entire data frame of each indicator group is passed to f_ag.
The function f_ag must be supplied as a string, e.g. "a_amean", and it must take as a minimum an input
x which is either a numeric vector (if by_df = FALSE), or a data frame (if by_df = TRUE). In the former
case f_ag should return a single numeric value (i.e. the result of aggregating x), or in the latter case
a numeric vector (the result of aggregating the whole data frame in one go).
Weights are passed to the function f_ag as an argument named w. This means that the function should have
arguments that look like f_ag(x, w, ...), where ... are possibly other input arguments to the function. If the
aggregation function doesn't use weights, you can set w = "none", and no weights will be passed to it.
f_ag can optionally have other parameters, apart from x and w, specified as a list in f_ag_para.
The aggregation specifications can be set to be different for each level of aggregation: the arguments f_ag,
f_ag_para, dat_thresh, w and by_df can all be optionally specified as vectors or lists of length n-1, where
n is the number of levels in the index. In this case, the first value in each vector/list will be used for the first
round of aggregation, i.e. from indicators to the aggregates at level 2. The next will be used to aggregate from
level 2 to level 3, and so on.
When different functions are used for different levels, it is important to get the list syntax correct. For example, in a case with
three aggregations using different functions, say we want to use a_amean() for the first two levels, then a custom
function f_cust() for the last. f_cust() has some additional parameters a and b. In this case, we would specify e.g.
f_ag_para = list(NULL, NULL, list(a = 2, b = 3)) - this is becauase a_amean() requires no additional parameters, so
we pass NULL.
Note that COINr has a number of aggregation functions built in,
all of which are of the form a_*(), e.g. a_amean(), a_gmean() and friends. To see a list browse COINr functions alphabetically or
type a_ in the R Studio console and press the tab key (after loading COINr), or see the online documentation.
Optionally, a data availability threshold can be assigned below which the aggregated value will return
NA (see dat_thresh argument). If by_df = TRUE, this will however be ignored because aggregation is not
done on individual rows. Note that more complex constraints could be built into f_ag if needed.
An updated coin with aggregated data set added at .$Data[[write_to]] if out2 = "coin",
else if out2 = "df" outputs the aggregated data set as a data frame.
# build example up to normalised data set
coin <- build_example_coin(up_to = "Normalise")
# aggregate normalised data set
coin <- Aggregate(coin, dset = "Normalised")
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