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slider (version 0.1.0)

slide_index: Slide relative to an index

Description

slide_index() is similar to slide(), but allows a secondary .i-ndex vector to be provided.

This is often useful in business calculations, when you want to compute a rolling computation looking "3 months back", which is approximately but not equivalent to, 3 * 30 days. slide_index() allows for these irregular window sizes.

Usage

slide_index(.x, .i, .f, ..., .before = 0L, .after = 0L, .complete = FALSE)

slide_index_vec( .x, .i, .f, ..., .before = 0L, .after = 0L, .complete = FALSE, .ptype = NULL )

slide_index_dbl(.x, .i, .f, ..., .before = 0L, .after = 0L, .complete = FALSE)

slide_index_int(.x, .i, .f, ..., .before = 0L, .after = 0L, .complete = FALSE)

slide_index_lgl(.x, .i, .f, ..., .before = 0L, .after = 0L, .complete = FALSE)

slide_index_chr(.x, .i, .f, ..., .before = 0L, .after = 0L, .complete = FALSE)

slide_index_dfr( .x, .i, .f, ..., .before = 0L, .after = 0L, .complete = FALSE, .names_to = NULL, .name_repair = c("unique", "universal", "check_unique") )

slide_index_dfc( .x, .i, .f, ..., .before = 0L, .after = 0L, .complete = FALSE, .size = NULL, .name_repair = c("unique", "universal", "check_unique", "minimal") )

Arguments

.x

[vector]

The vector to iterate over and apply .f to.

.i

[vector]

The index vector that determines the window sizes. The lower bound of the window range will be computed as .i - .before, and the upper bound as .i + .after. It is fairly common to supply a date vector as the index, but not required.

There are 3 restrictions on the index:

  • The size of the index must match the size of .x, they will not be recycled to their common size.

  • The index must be an increasing vector, but duplicate values are allowed.

  • The index cannot have missing values.

.f

[function / formula]

If a function, it is used as is.

If a formula, e.g. ~ .x + 2, it is converted to a function. There are three ways to refer to the arguments:

  • For a single argument function, use .

  • For a two argument function, use .x and .y

  • For more arguments, use ..1, ..2, ..3 etc

This syntax allows you to create very compact anonymous functions.

...

Additional arguments passed on to the mapped function.

.before, .after

[vector(1) / Inf]

The number of values before or after the current element of .i to include in the sliding window. Set to Inf to select all elements before or after the current element. Negative values are allowed, which allows you to "look forward" from the current element if used as the .before value, or "look backwards" if used as .after.

Any object that can be added or subtracted from .i with + and - can be used. For example, a lubridate period, such as lubridate::weeks().

The ranges that result from computing .i - .before and .i + .after have the same 3 restrictions as .i itself.

.complete

[logical(1)]

Should .f be evaluated on complete windows only? If FALSE, the default, then partial computations will be allowed.

.ptype

[vector(0) / NULL]

A prototype corresponding to the type of the output.

If NULL, the default, the output type is determined by computing the common type across the results of the calls to .f.

If supplied, the result of each call to .f will be cast to that type, and the final output will have that type.

If getOption("vctrs.no_guessing") is TRUE, the .ptype must be supplied. This is a way to make production code demand fixed types.

.names_to

Optionally, the name of a column where the names of ... arguments are copied. These names are useful to identify which row comes from which input. If supplied and ... is not named, an integer column is used to identify the rows.

.name_repair

One of "unique", "universal", or "check_unique". See vec_as_names() for the meaning of these options.

With vec_rbind(), the repair function is applied to all inputs separately. This is because vec_rbind() needs to align their columns before binding the rows, and thus needs all inputs to have unique names. On the other hand, vec_cbind() applies the repair function after all inputs have been concatenated together in a final data frame. Hence vec_cbind() allows the more permissive minimal names repair.

.size

If, NULL, the default, will determine the number of rows in vec_cbind() output by using the standard recycling rules.

Alternatively, specify the desired number of rows, and any inputs of length 1 will be recycled appropriately.

Value

A vector fulfilling the following invariants:

slide_index()

  • vec_size(slide_index(.x)) == vec_size(.x)

  • vec_ptype(slide_index(.x)) == list()

slide_index_vec() and slide_index_*() variants

  • vec_size(slide_index_vec(.x)) == vec_size(.x)

  • vec_size(slide_index_vec(.x)[[1]]) == 1L

  • vec_ptype(slide_index_vec(.x, .ptype = ptype)) == ptype

See Also

slide(), hop_index(), slide_index2()

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
x <- 1:5

# In some cases, sliding over `x` with a strict window size of 2
# will fit your use case.
slide(x, ~.x, .before = 1)

# However, if this `i` is a date vector paired with `x`, when computing
# rolling calculations you might want to iterate over `x` while
# respecting the fact that `i` is an irregular sequence.
i <- as.Date("2019-08-15") + c(0:1, 4, 6, 7)

# For example, a "2 day" window should not pair `"2019-08-19"` and
# `"2019-08-21"` together, even though they are next to each other in `x`.
# `slide_index()` computes the lookback value from the current date in `.i`,
# meaning that if you are currently on `"2019-08-21"` and look back 1 day,
# it will correctly not include `"2019-08-19"`.
slide_index(i, i, ~.x, .before = 1)

# We could have equivalently used a lubridate period object for this as well,
# since `i - lubridate::days(1)` is allowed
slide_index(i, i, ~.x, .before = lubridate::days(1))

# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

# When `.i` has repeated values, they are always grouped together.
i <- c(2017, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2020)
slide_index(i, i, ~.x)
slide_index(i, i, ~.x, .after = 1)

# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Rolling regressions

# Rolling regressions are easy with `slide_index()` because:
# - Data frame `.x` values are iterated over rowwise
# - The index is respected by using `.i`
set.seed(123)

df <- data.frame(
  y = rnorm(100),
  x = rnorm(100),
  i = as.Date("2019-08-15") + c(0, 2, 4, 6:102) # <- irregular
)

# 20 day rolling regression. Current day + 19 days back.
# Additionally, set `.complete = TRUE` to not compute partial results.
regr <- slide_index(df, df$i, ~lm(y ~ x, .x), .before = 19, .complete = TRUE)

regr[16:18]

# The first 16 slots are NULL because there is no possible way to
# look back 19 days from the 16th index position and construct a full
# window. But on the 17th index position, `""2019-09-03"`, if we look
# back 19 days we get to `""2019-08-15"`, which is the same value as
# `i[1]` so a full window can be constructed.
i[16] - 19 >= i[1] # FALSE
i[17] - 19 >= i[1] # TRUE

# }

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