joins: SQL Joins

joinsR Documentation

SQL Joins

Description

Overloads the dplyr ⁠*_join⁠ to accept an na_by argument. By default, joining using SQL does not match on NA / NULL. dbplyr ⁠*_join⁠s has the option "na_matches = na" to match on NA / NULL but this is very inefficient in some cases. This function does the matching more efficiently: If a column contains NA / NULL, the names of these columns can be passed via the na_by argument and efficiently match as if "na_matches = na". If no na_by argument is given is given, the function defaults to using ⁠dplyr::*_join⁠.

Usage

## S3 method for class 'tbl_sql'
inner_join(x, y, by = NULL, ...)

## S3 method for class 'tbl_sql'
left_join(x, y, by = NULL, ...)

## S3 method for class 'tbl_sql'
right_join(x, y, by = NULL, ...)

## S3 method for class 'tbl_sql'
full_join(x, y, by = NULL, ...)

## S3 method for class 'tbl_sql'
semi_join(x, y, by = NULL, ...)

## S3 method for class 'tbl_sql'
anti_join(x, y, by = NULL, ...)

Arguments

x, y

A pair of lazy data frames backed by database queries.

by

A join specification created with join_by(), or a character vector of variables to join by.

If NULL, the default, ⁠*_join()⁠ will perform a natural join, using all variables in common across x and y. A message lists the variables so that you can check they're correct; suppress the message by supplying by explicitly.

To join on different variables between x and y, use a join_by() specification. For example, join_by(a == b) will match x$a to y$b.

To join by multiple variables, use a join_by() specification with multiple expressions. For example, join_by(a == b, c == d) will match x$a to y$b and x$c to y$d. If the column names are the same between x and y, you can shorten this by listing only the variable names, like join_by(a, c).

join_by() can also be used to perform inequality, rolling, and overlap joins. See the documentation at ?join_by for details on these types of joins.

For simple equality joins, you can alternatively specify a character vector of variable names to join by. For example, by = c("a", "b") joins x$a to y$a and x$b to y$b. If variable names differ between x and y, use a named character vector like by = c("x_a" = "y_a", "x_b" = "y_b").

To perform a cross-join, generating all combinations of x and y, see cross_join().

...

Other parameters passed onto methods.

Value

Another tbl_lazy. Use show_query() to see the generated query, and use collect() to execute the query and return data to R.

See Also

dplyr::mutate-joins which this function wraps.

dbplyr::join.tbl_sql which this function wraps.

dplyr::show_query

Examples


  library(dplyr, warn.conflicts = FALSE)
  library(dbplyr, warn.conflicts = FALSE)

  band_db <- tbl_memdb(dplyr::band_members)
  instrument_db <- tbl_memdb(dplyr::band_instruments)

  left_join(band_db, instrument_db) |>
    show_query()

  # Can join with local data frames by setting copy = TRUE
  left_join(band_db, dplyr::band_instruments, copy = TRUE)

  # Unlike R, joins in SQL don't usually match NAs (NULLs)
  db <- memdb_frame(x = c(1, 2, NA))
  label <- memdb_frame(x = c(1, NA), label = c("one", "missing"))
  left_join(db, label, by = "x")

  # But you can activate R's usual behaviour with the na_matches argument
  left_join(db, label, by = "x", na_matches = "na")

  # By default, joins are equijoins, but you can use `sql_on` to
  # express richer relationships
  db1 <- memdb_frame(x = 1:5)
  db2 <- memdb_frame(x = 1:3, y = letters[1:3])

  left_join(db1, db2) |> show_query()
  left_join(db1, db2, sql_on = "LHS.x < RHS.x") |> show_query()


SCDB documentation built on Oct. 4, 2024, 1:09 a.m.