anti_join | R Documentation |
Filtering joins filter rows from x
based on the presence or absence
of matches in y
:
semi_join()
return all rows from x
with a match in y
.
anti_join()
return all rows from x
without a match in y
.
## S3 method for class 'SingleCellExperiment'
anti_join(x, y, by = NULL, copy = FALSE, ...)
x , y |
A pair of data frames, data frame extensions (e.g. a tibble), or lazy data frames (e.g. from dbplyr or dtplyr). See Methods, below, for more details. |
by |
A join specification created with If To join on different variables between To join by multiple variables, use a
For simple equality joins, you can alternatively specify a character vector
of variable names to join by. For example, To perform a cross-join, generating all combinations of |
copy |
If |
... |
Other parameters passed onto methods. |
An object of the same type as x
. The output has the following properties:
Rows are a subset of the input, but appear in the same order.
Columns are not modified.
Data frame attributes are preserved.
Groups are taken from x
. The number of groups may be reduced.
These function are generics, which means that packages can provide implementations (methods) for other classes. See the documentation of individual methods for extra arguments and differences in behaviour.
Methods available in currently loaded packages:
semi_join()
: \Sexpr[stage=render,results=rd]{dplyr:::methods_rd("semi_join")}.
anti_join()
: \Sexpr[stage=render,results=rd]{dplyr:::methods_rd("anti_join")}.
Other joins:
cross_join()
,
mutate-joins
,
nest_join()
data(pbmc_small)
tt <- pbmc_small
tt |> anti_join(tt |>
distinct(groups) |>
mutate(new_column=1:2) |>
slice(1))
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