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Hmisc (version 5.2-1)

Merge: Merge Multiple Data Frames or Data Tables

Description

Merges an arbitrarily large series of data frames or data tables containing common id variables. Information about number of observations and number of unique ids in individual and final merged datasets is printed. The first data frame/table has special meaning in that all of its observations are kept whether they match ids in other data frames or not. For all other data frames, by default non-matching observations are dropped. The first data frame is also the one against which counts of unique ids are compared. Sometimes merge drops variable attributes such as labels and units. These are restored by Merge.

Usage

Merge(..., id = NULL, all = TRUE, verbose = TRUE)

Arguments

...

two or more dataframes or data tables

id

a formula containing all the identification variables such that the combination of these variables uniquely identifies subjects or records of interest. May be omitted for data tables; in that case the key function retrieves the id variables.

all

set to FALSE to drop observations not found in second and later data frames (only applies if not using data.table)

verbose

set to FALSE to not print information about observations

Examples

Run this code
if (FALSE) {
a <- data.frame(sid=1:3, age=c(20,30,40))
b <- data.frame(sid=c(1,2,2), bp=c(120,130,140))
d <- data.frame(sid=c(1,3,4), wt=c(170,180,190))
all <- Merge(a, b, d, id = ~ sid)
# First file should be the master file and must
# contain all ids that ever occur.  ids not in the master will
# not be merged from other datasets.
a <- data.table(a); setkey(a, sid)
# data.table also does not allow duplicates without allow.cartesian=TRUE
b <- data.table(sid=1:2, bp=c(120,130)); setkey(b, sid)
d <- data.table(d); setkey(d, sid)
all <- Merge(a, b, d)
}

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