| joinDatasets | R Documentation |
As base::merge() does for data.frames, this function takes two datasets,
matches rows based on a specified key variable, and adds columns from one to
the other.
joinDatasets(
x,
y,
by = intersect(names(x), names(y)),
by.x = by,
by.y = by,
all = FALSE,
all.x = TRUE,
all.y = FALSE,
copy = TRUE
)
extendDataset(
x,
y,
by = intersect(names(x), names(y)),
by.x = by,
by.y = by,
all = FALSE,
all.x = TRUE,
all.y = FALSE,
...
)
## S3 method for class 'CrunchDataset'
merge(
x,
y,
by = intersect(names(x), names(y)),
by.x = by,
by.y = by,
all = FALSE,
all.x = TRUE,
all.y = FALSE,
...
)
x |
CrunchDataset to add data to |
y |
CrunchDataset to copy data from. May be filtered by rows and/or columns. |
by |
character, optional shortcut for specifying |
by.x |
CrunchVariable in |
by.y |
CrunchVariable in |
all |
logical: should all rows in x and y be kept, i.e. a "full outer"
join? Only |
all.x |
logical: should all rows in x be kept, i.e. a "left outer"
join? Only |
all.y |
logical: should all rows in y be kept, i.e. a "right outer"
join? Only |
copy |
logical: make a virtual or materialized join. Default is
|
... |
additional arguments, ignored |
Since joining two datasets can sometimes produce unexpected results if the
keys differ between the two datasets, you may want to follow the
fork-edit-merge workflow for this operation. To do this, fork the dataset
with forkDataset(), join the new data to the fork, ensure that
the resulting dataset is correct, and merge it back to the original dataset
with mergeFork(). For more, see
vignette("fork-and-merge", package = "crunch").
x extended by the columns of y, matched on the "by" variables.
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