Description Usage Arguments Details Value Author(s) See Also Examples
unipos returns the positions of those elements returned by unique.
1 2 3 4  | 
x | 
 a vector or a data frame or an array or   | 
incomparables | 
 ignored  | 
order | 
 The order in which positions of unique values will be returned, see details  | 
nunique | 
 NULL or the number of unique values (including NA). Providing   | 
method | 
 NULL for automatic method selection or a suitable low-level method, see details  | 
... | 
 ignored  | 
This function automatically chooses from several low-level functions considering the size of x and the availability of a cache. 
Suitable methods are hashmapupo (simultaneously creating and using a hashmap)
, hashupo (first creating a hashmap then using it)
, sortorderupo (fast ordering) 
and orderupo (memory saving ordering).
The default order="original" collects unique values in the order of the first appearance in x like in unique, this costs extra processing. 
order="values" collects unique values in sorted order like in table, this costs extra processing with the hash methods but comes for free. 
order="any" collects unique values in undefined order, possibly faster. For hash methods this will be a quasi random order, for sort methods this will be sorted order.
an integer vector of positions
Jens Oehlschlägel <Jens.Oehlschlaegel@truecluster.com>
unique.integer64 for unique values and match.integer64 for general matching.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9  | x <- as.integer64(sample(c(rep(NA, 9), 1:9), 32, TRUE))
unipos(x)
unipos(x, order="values")
stopifnot(identical(unipos(x),  (1:length(x))[!duplicated(x)]))
stopifnot(identical(unipos(x),  match.integer64(unique(x), x)))
stopifnot(identical(unipos(x, order="values"),  match.integer64(unique(x, order="values"), x)))
stopifnot(identical(unique(x),  x[unipos(x)]))
stopifnot(identical(unique(x, order="values"),  x[unipos(x, order="values")]))
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