merge
Merge Two Datasets and Match Columns

Description

Merges two data frames, matching the names or numbers of a set of columns.

Usage

merge(x, y, ...)
merge.default(x, y, ...)
merge.data.frame(x, y, by = intersect(names(x), names(y)), by.x = by,
    by.y = by, all = FALSE, all.x = all, all.y = all, sort = TRUE,
    suffixes = c(".x", ".y"), incomparables = NULL, ...)

Arguments

x a data frame, or data to be converted into a data frame.
y a data frame, or data to be converted into a data frame.
by a vector of columns by which to match. This can be a vector of column names, of column numbers, or of a logical vector with a TRUE or FALSE for each column, specifying which columns to match by. The special name row.names indicates to match by the row names of the data frames. In that case, a new column called Row.names is created.

If you supply by, it is used for both x and y. If the by columns have different names or locations in x and y, then use by.x and by.y.

The default value is the vector of column names that are common to x and y.

by.x see by.
by.y see by.
all specifies both all.x=TRUE and all.y=TRUE.
all.x a logical value; if TRUE, extra rows are added to the output, one for each row in x that has no matching row in y. These rows have NAs in the columns that are usually filled with values from y. The default is FALSE, so only rows with data from both x and y are included in the output.
all.y a logical value. Analogous to all.x, controlling when the output contains rows for y when no rows match an x row.
sort a logical flag. If TRUE (the default), indicates that the result should be sorted by by columns.
suffixes a character vector containing two distinct strings. If x and y have any column names in common, and those columns are not used for matching, the output has two columns with the same name, which is not allowed for data frames. merge pastes suffixes on these repeated column names to make them unique. The default is c(".x",".y").
incomparables a vector of values that cannot be matched. If incomparables is NULL (the default) or FALSE, all values can be matched. See match for more details.
... other arguments to be passed to or from methods.

Details

For two data frames x and y, matches the names or numbers of a set of columns (the by columns) in each. Returns a new data frame containing a row for each pair of rows in x and y, and whose by columns have the same values. This returned row contains all columns in both x and y, except only one copy of the by columns appear. (In database language this is called the join of two relations.) You might have one to one, many to one, or many to many matching. Note that x and y need not have similar dimensions, but the columns to match by should contain similar data.
In some cases, you might want to include all the rows in one or both data sets in the output, even if there is no matching row in the other. The all.x and all.y arguments let you do this. In the rows without matches, merge puts NAs in the columns with no matching data.
This is a generic function, but currently the only substantive method for it works on data frames. The default method converts x and y to data frames and calls the method for data frames.
Value
returns a data frame with the by columns first, followed by the remaining columns of x and y.
See Also
cbind, data.frame, match, rbind, seriesMerge.
Examples
# Create 2 data frames, one with information on authors
# and one concerning books.  Use merge to relate the
# names of the books written to attributes of the authors.
# Note that some authors have no books listed and some have
# several books.
authors <- data.frame(
    FirstName=c("Lorne", "Loren", "Robin",
                  "Robin", "Billy"),
    LastName=c("Green", "Jaye", "Green",
                 "Howe", "Jaye"),
    Age=c(82, 40, 45, 2, 40),
    Income=c(1200000, 40000, 25000, 0, 27500),
    Home=c("California", "Washington", "Washington",
    	"Alberta", "Washington"))

books <- data.frame( AuthorFirstName=c("Lorne", "Loren", "Loren", "Loren", "Robin", "Rich"), AuthorLastName=c("Green", "Jaye", "Jaye", "Jaye", "Green", "Calaway"), Book=c("Bonanza", "Midwifery", "Gardening", "Perennials", "Who_dun_it?", "Support")) # Look at all cases in which the author is in both the # authors and books datasets. Match author by both first # and last names -- these have different labels in the 2 # datasets but are in the first 2 columns of both. merge(authors, books, by=1:2) # Produces the following output: # FirstName LastName Age Income Home Book # 1 Loren Jaye 40 40000 Washington Midwifery # 2 Loren Jaye 40 40000 Washington Gardening # 3 Loren Jaye 40 40000 Washington Perennials # 4 Lorne Green 82 1200000 California Bonanza # 5 Robin Green 45 25000 Washington Who_dun_it?

# Next, make sure all authors in the authors dataset are # listed, even if there is no book listed for them. Using # by.x and by.y may be a more reliable way to handle # cases in which the datasets have different names for # the columns to match by. merge(authors, books, by.x=c("FirstName", "LastName"), by.y=c("AuthorFirstName", "AuthorLastName"), all.x=TRUE) # Produces the following: # FirstName LastName Age Income Home Book # 1 Billy Jaye 40 27500 Washington <NA> # 2 Loren Jaye 40 40000 Washington Midwifery # 3 Loren Jaye 40 40000 Washington Gardening # 4 Loren Jaye 40 40000 Washington Perennials # 5 Lorne Green 82 1200000 California Bonanza # 6 Robin Green 45 25000 Washington Who_dun_it? # 7 Robin Howe 2 0 Alberta <NA>

merge(authors, books, by = 1:2, sort = FALSE) # Produces the following: # FirstName LastName Age Income Home Book # 1 Lorne Green 82 1200000 California Bonanza # 2 Loren Jaye 40 40000 Washington Midwifery # 3 Loren Jaye 40 40000 Washington Gardening # 4 Loren Jaye 40 40000 Washington Perennials # 5 Robin Green 45 25000 Washington Who_dun_it?

merge(authors, books, by = "row.names") # Produces the following: # Row.names FirstName LastName Age Income Home AuthorFirstName AuthorLastName Book # 1 1 Lorne Green 82 1200000 California Lorne Green Bonanza # 2 2 Loren Jaye 40 40000 Washington Loren Jaye Midwifery # 3 3 Robin Green 45 25000 Washington Loren Jaye Gardening # 4 4 Robin Howe 2 0 Alberta Loren Jaye Perennials # 5 5 Billy Jaye 40 27500 Washington Robin Green Who_dun_it?

# "Loren" is not matched. 3 rows are gotten. merge(authors, books, by.x = 1, by.y = 1, incomparables = c("Loren")) # Produces the following: # FirstName LastName Age Income Home AuthorLastName Book # 1 Lorne Green 82 1200000 California Green Bonanza # 2 Robin Green 45 25000 Washington Green Who_dun_it? # 3 Robin Howe 2 0 Alberta Green Who_dun_it?

# Use the state.x77 dataset to relate the income of the author # to the median income of his or her home state (we have no # information on Alberta, a Canadian province). Note the use # of "row.names" where the "column" to match on is not a variable # in the dataset but is the names of the rows. Both datasets have # a column called "Income" which is not a key variable, so supply # the suffixes argument to distinguish between them in the # output (without suffixes they would be labeled "Income.x" # and "Income.y"). state.data <- data.frame(Sdatasets::state.x77) merge(authors, state.data[, "Income", drop=FALSE], by.x="Home", by.y="row.names", all.x=TRUE, suffixes=c("Author", "State")) ## Home FirstName LastName Age IncomeAuthor IncomeState ## 1 Alberta Robin Howe 2 0 NA ## 2 California Lorne Green 82 1200000 5114 ## 3 Washington Loren Jaye 40 40000 4864 ## 4 Washington Robin Green 45 25000 4864 ## 5 Washington Billy Jaye 40 27500 4864

Package base version 6.1.4-13
Package Index