Dimitri Liakhovitski
2010-Mar-26 21:05 UTC
[R] Competing with SPSS and SAS: improving code that loops through rows (data manipulation)
Dear R-ers, In my question there are no statistics involved - it's all about data manipulation in R. I am trying to write a code that should replace what's currently being done in SAS and SPSS. Or, at least, I am trying to show to my colleagues R is not much worse than SAS/SPSS for the task at hand. I've written a code that works but it's too slow. Probably because it's looping through a lot of things. But I am not seeing how to improve it. I've already written a different code but it's 5 times slower than this one. The code below takes me slightly above 5 sec for the tiny data set. I've tried using it with a real one - was not done after hours. Need help of the list! Maybe someone will have an idea on how to increase the efficiency of my code (just one block of it - in the "DATA TRANSFORMATION" Section below)? Below - I am creating the data set whose structure is similar to the data sets the code should be applied to. Also - I have desribed what's actually being done - in comments. Thanks a lot to anyone for any suggestion! Dimitri ###### CREATING THE TEST DATA SET ################################ set.seed(123) data<-data.frame(group=c(rep("first",10),rep("second",10)),week=c(1:10,1:10),a=abs(round(rnorm(20)*10,0)), b=abs(round(rnorm(20)*100,0))) data dim(data)[1] # !!! In real life I might have up to 150 (!) rows (weeks) within each subgroup ### Specifying parameters used in the code below: vars<-names(data)[3:4] # names of variables to be transformed nr.vars<-length(vars) # number of variables to be transformed; !!! in real life I'll have to deal with up to 50-60 variables, not 2. group.var<-names(data)[1] # name of the grouping variable subgroups<-levels(data[[group.var]]) # names of subgroups; !!! in real life I'll have up to 20-25 subgroups, not 2. # For EACH subgroup: indexing variables a and b to their maximum in that subgroup; # Further, I'll have to use these indexed variables to build the new ones: for(i in vars){ new.name<-paste(i,".ind.to.max",sep="") data[[new.name]]<-NA } indexed.vars<-names(data)[grep("ind.to.max$", names(data))] # variables indexed to subgroup max for(subgroup in subgroups){ data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup,indexed.vars]<-lapply(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup,vars],function(x){ y<-x/max(x) return(y) }) } data ############# DATA TRANSFORMATION ######################################### # Objective: Create new variables based on the old ones (a and b ind.to.max) # For each new variable, the value in a given row is a function of (a) 2 constants (that have several levels each), # (b) the corresponding value of the original variable (e.g., a.ind.to.max"), and the value in the previous row on the same new variable # PLUS: - it has to be done by subgroup (variable "group") constant1<-c(1:3) # constant 1 used for transformation - has 3 levels; !!! in real life it will have up to 7 levels constant2<-seq(.15,.45,.15) # constant 2 used for transformation - has 3 levels; !!! in real life it will have up to 7 levels # CODE THAT IS TOO SLOW (it uses parameters specified in the previous code section): start1<-Sys.time() for(var in indexed.vars){ # looping through variables for(c1 in 1:length(constant1)){ # looping through levels of constant1 for(c2 in 1:length(constant2)){ # looping through levels of constant2 d=log(0.5)/constant1[c1] l=-log(1-constant2[c2]) name<-paste(strsplit(var,".ind.to.max"),constant1[c1],constant2[c2]*100,"..transf",sep=".") data[[name]]<-NA for(subgroup in subgroups){ # looping through subgroups data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][1] 1-((1-0*exp(1)^d)/(exp(1)^(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, var][1]*l*10))) # this is just the very first row of each subgroup for(case in 2:nrow(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, ])){ # looping through the remaining rows of the subgroup data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][case]1-((1-data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][case-1]*exp(1)^d)/(exp(1)^(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, var][case]*l*10))) } } } } } end1<-Sys.time() print(end1-start1) # Takes me ~0.53 secs names(data) data -- Dimitri Liakhovitski Ninah.com Dimitri.Liakhovitski at ninah.com
Bert Gunter
2010-Mar-26 21:25 UTC
[R] Competing with SPSS and SAS: improving code that loops throughrows (data manipulation)
Dmitri: If you follow the R posting guide you're more likely to get useful replies. In particular it asks for **small** reproducible examples -- your example is far more code then I care to spend time on anyway (others may be more willing or more able to do so of course). I suggest you try (if you haven't already): 1. Profiling the code using Rprof to isolate where the time is spent.And then... 2. Writing a **small** reproducible example to exercise that portion of the code and post it with your question to the list. If you need to... Typically, if you do these things you'll figure out how to fix the situation on your own. Cheers, Bert Gunter Genentech Nonclinical Statistics -----Original Message----- From: r-help-bounces at r-project.org [mailto:r-help-bounces at r-project.org] On Behalf Of Dimitri Liakhovitski Sent: Friday, March 26, 2010 2:06 PM To: r-help Subject: [R] Competing with SPSS and SAS: improving code that loops throughrows (data manipulation) Dear R-ers, In my question there are no statistics involved - it's all about data manipulation in R. I am trying to write a code that should replace what's currently being done in SAS and SPSS. Or, at least, I am trying to show to my colleagues R is not much worse than SAS/SPSS for the task at hand. I've written a code that works but it's too slow. Probably because it's looping through a lot of things. But I am not seeing how to improve it. I've already written a different code but it's 5 times slower than this one. The code below takes me slightly above 5 sec for the tiny data set. I've tried using it with a real one - was not done after hours. Need help of the list! Maybe someone will have an idea on how to increase the efficiency of my code (just one block of it - in the "DATA TRANSFORMATION" Section below)? Below - I am creating the data set whose structure is similar to the data sets the code should be applied to. Also - I have desribed what's actually being done - in comments. Thanks a lot to anyone for any suggestion! Dimitri ###### CREATING THE TEST DATA SET ################################ set.seed(123) data<-data.frame(group=c(rep("first",10),rep("second",10)),week=c(1:10,1:10) ,a=abs(round(rnorm(20)*10,0)), b=abs(round(rnorm(20)*100,0))) data dim(data)[1] # !!! In real life I might have up to 150 (!) rows (weeks) within each subgroup ### Specifying parameters used in the code below: vars<-names(data)[3:4] # names of variables to be transformed nr.vars<-length(vars) # number of variables to be transformed; !!! in real life I'll have to deal with up to 50-60 variables, not 2. group.var<-names(data)[1] # name of the grouping variable subgroups<-levels(data[[group.var]]) # names of subgroups; !!! in real life I'll have up to 20-25 subgroups, not 2. # For EACH subgroup: indexing variables a and b to their maximum in that subgroup; # Further, I'll have to use these indexed variables to build the new ones: for(i in vars){ new.name<-paste(i,".ind.to.max",sep="") data[[new.name]]<-NA } indexed.vars<-names(data)[grep("ind.to.max$", names(data))] # variables indexed to subgroup max for(subgroup in subgroups){ data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup,indexed.vars]<-lapply(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup,vars],function(x){ y<-x/max(x) return(y) }) } data ############# DATA TRANSFORMATION ######################################### # Objective: Create new variables based on the old ones (a and b ind.to.max) # For each new variable, the value in a given row is a function of (a) 2 constants (that have several levels each), # (b) the corresponding value of the original variable (e.g., a.ind.to.max"), and the value in the previous row on the same new variable # PLUS: - it has to be done by subgroup (variable "group") constant1<-c(1:3) # constant 1 used for transformation - has 3 levels; !!! in real life it will have up to 7 levels constant2<-seq(.15,.45,.15) # constant 2 used for transformation - has 3 levels; !!! in real life it will have up to 7 levels # CODE THAT IS TOO SLOW (it uses parameters specified in the previous code section): start1<-Sys.time() for(var in indexed.vars){ # looping through variables for(c1 in 1:length(constant1)){ # looping through levels of constant1 for(c2 in 1:length(constant2)){ # looping through levels of constant2 d=log(0.5)/constant1[c1] l=-log(1-constant2[c2]) name<-paste(strsplit(var,".ind.to.max"),constant1[c1],constant2[c2]*100,"..t ransf",sep=".") data[[name]]<-NA for(subgroup in subgroups){ # looping through subgroups data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][1] 1-((1-0*exp(1)^d)/(exp(1)^(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, var][1]*l*10))) # this is just the very first row of each subgroup for(case in 2:nrow(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, ])){ # looping through the remaining rows of the subgroup data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][case]1-((1-data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][case-1]*exp(1)^d)/(exp(1)^(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, var][case]*l*10))) } } } } } end1<-Sys.time() print(end1-start1) # Takes me ~0.53 secs names(data) data -- Dimitri Liakhovitski Ninah.com Dimitri.Liakhovitski at ninah.com ______________________________________________ R-help at r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
Jim Price
2010-Mar-26 23:28 UTC
[R] Competing with SPSS and SAS: improving code that loops through rows (data manipulation)
Here's my first stab. It removes some of the typical redundencies in your code (loops, building data frames by adding one column at a time) and instead does what is probably more canonical R style (although I'm willing to be corrected, as I suspect my code is a little suspect at times). For this example, I got a 10-fold speed-up, although I suspect this code will scale a lot better - primarily because I'm not continually expanding the data frames one column at a time, but instead working each part out separately and then sticking them together at the end. The key commands used (for when you look through the help files) are lapply, do.call, by and Reduce. If you use this scaled up you'd need to play with some of the indices in places, but I'm sure that's all pretty obvious. Oh, and because this is the usual (and good!) advice - don't call your data 'data': library(fortunes) fortune('dog') # This was your base set-up code set.seed(123) data<-data.frame(group=c(rep("first",10),rep("second",10)),week=c(1:10,1:10),a=abs(round(rnorm(20)*10,0)), b=abs(round(rnorm(20)*100,0))) data # Set up the ratio variables system.time({ temp <- cbind(data, do.call(cbind, lapply(names(data)[3:4], function(.x) { unlist(by(data, data$group, function(.y) .y[,.x] / max(.y[,.x]))) }))) colnames(temp)[5:6] <- paste(colnames(data)[3:4], 'ind.to.max', sep = '.') }) system.time({ constants <- expand.grid(vars = colnames(temp)[5:6], c1 = 1:3, c2 seq(0.15, 0.45, 0.15)) results <- lapply(seq(nrow(constants)), function(.x) { dat <- temp[, as.character(constants[.x, 1])] d <- exp(1) ^ log(0.5) / constants[.x, 2] l <- -10 * log(1 - constants[.x, 3]) unlist(by(dat, temp$group, function(.y) Reduce(function(.u, .v) 1 - ((1 - .u * d) / (exp(1) ^ (.v * l))), .y, accumulate = T, init = 0)[-1])) }) final <- cbind(temp, do.call(cbind, results)) colnames(final)[-(1:6)] <- paste(substr(constants$vars, 1, 1), constants$c1, 100*constants$c2, '..transf', sep = '.') }) Jim Price. Cardiome Pharma Corp. -- View this message in context: http://n4.nabble.com/Competing-with-SPSS-and-SAS-improving-code-that-loops-through-rows-data-manipulation-tp1692848p1692967.html Sent from the R help mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Steven McKinney
2010-Mar-27 03:58 UTC
[R] Competing with SPSS and SAS: improving code that loops throughrows (data manipulation)
Hi Dimitri Your code is complex, so this won't be easy for anyone to deparse. I think part of the issue is in the calculation you are doing in your innermost loop data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][case]1-((1-data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][case-1]*exp(1)^d)/(exp(1)^(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, var][case]*l*10))) This looks to me to be a lag-1 calculation, and not all lagged calculations are vectorizable, so this part may have to be done in a loop. If so, working on a matrix instead of a dataframe can help speed up code dramatically, especially with big dataframes (I've seen 10-fold increases in speed by working with big matrices with no row or column names instead of dataframes). Pre-declare a matrix big enough to hold all your results outside of the loop, then do your calculations using the matrix inside the loop. You can convert the matrix to a dataframe after the loop completes if needed. HTH Steven McKinney ________________________________________ From: r-help-bounces at r-project.org [r-help-bounces at r-project.org] On Behalf Of Dimitri Liakhovitski [ld7631 at gmail.com] Sent: March 26, 2010 6:40 PM To: Bert Gunter Cc: r-help Subject: Re: [R] Competing with SPSS and SAS: improving code that loops throughrows (data manipulation) My sincere apologies if it looked large. Let me try again with less code. It's hard to do less than that. In fact - there is nothing in this code but 1 formula and many loops, which is the problem I am not sure how to solve. I also tried to be as clear as possible with the comments. Dimitri ## START OF THE CODE TO PRODUCE SMALL DATA EXAMPLE set.seed(123) data<-data.frame(group=c(rep("first",10),rep("second",10)),a=abs(round(rnorm(20,mean=0, sd=.55),2)), b=abs(round(rnorm(20,mean=0, sd=.55),2))) data # "data" it is the data frame to work with ## END OF THE CODE TO PRODUCE SMALL DATA EXAMPLE. In real life "data" would contain up to 150-200 rows PER SUBGROUP ### Specifying useful parameters used in the slow code below: vars<-names(data)[2:3] # names of variables used in transformation; in real life - up to 50-60 variables group.var<-names(data)[1] # name of the grouping variable subgroups<-levels(data[[group.var]]) # names of subgroups; in real life - up to 30 subgroups # OBJECTIVE: # Need to create new variables based on the old ones (a & b) # For each new variable, the value in a given row is a function of (a) 2 constants (that have several levels each), # (b) value of the original variable (e.g., a.ind.to.max"), and the value in the previous row on the same new variable # Plus - it has to be done by subgroup (variable "group") # Defining 2 constants: constant1<-c(1:3) # constant 1 used in transformation - has 3 levels, in real life - up to 7 levels constant2<-seq(.15,.45,.15) # constant 2 used in transformation - has 3 levels, in real life - up to 7 levels ### CODE THAT IS SLOW. Reason - too many loops with the inner-most loop being very slow - as it is looping through rows: for(var in vars){ # looping through variables for(c1 in 1:length(constant1)){ # looping through values of constant1 for(c2 in 1:length(constant2)){ # looping through values of constant2 d=log(0.5)/constant1[c1] l=-log(1-constant2[c2]) name<-paste(var,constant1[c1],constant2[c2]*100,".transf",sep=".") data[[name]]<-NA for(subgroup in subgroups){ # looping through subgroups data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][1] 1-((1-0*exp(1)^d)/(exp(1)^(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, var][1]*l*10))) ### THIS SECTION IS THE SLOWEST - BECAUSE I AM LOOPING THROUGH ROWS: for(case in 2:nrow(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, ])){ # looping through rows data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][case]1-((1-data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][case-1]*exp(1)^d)/(exp(1)^(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, var][case]*l*10))) } ### END OF THE SLOWEST SECTION (INNERMOST LOOP) } } } } ### END OF THE CODE On Fri, Mar 26, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Bert Gunter <gunter.berton at gene.com> wrote:> Dmitri: > > If you follow the R posting guide you're more likely to get useful replies. > In particular it asks for **small** reproducible examples -- your example is > far more code then I care to spend time on anyway (others may be more > willing or more able to do so of course). I suggest you try (if you haven't > already): > > 1. Profiling the code using Rprof to isolate where the time is spent.And > then... > > 2. Writing a **small** reproducible example to exercise that portion of the > code and post it with your question to the list. If you need to... > Typically, if you do these things you'll figure out how to fix the > situation on your own. > > Cheers, > > Bert Gunter > Genentech Nonclinical Statistics > > -----Original Message----- > From: r-help-bounces at r-project.org [mailto:r-help-bounces at r-project.org] On > Behalf Of Dimitri Liakhovitski > Sent: Friday, March 26, 2010 2:06 PM > To: r-help > Subject: [R] Competing with SPSS and SAS: improving code that loops > throughrows (data manipulation) > > Dear R-ers, > > In my question there are no statistics involved - it's all about data > manipulation in R. > I am trying to write a code that should replace what's currently being > done in SAS and SPSS. Or, at least, I am trying to show to my > colleagues R is not much worse than SAS/SPSS for the task at hand. > I've written a code that works but it's too slow. Probably because > it's looping through a lot of things. But I am not seeing how to > improve it. I've already written a different code but it's 5 times > slower than this one. The code below takes me slightly above 5 sec for > the tiny data set. I've tried using it with a real one - was not done > after hours. > Need help of the list! Maybe someone will have an idea on how to > increase the efficiency of my code (just one block of it - in the > "DATA TRANSFORMATION" Section below)? > > Below - I am creating the data set whose structure is similar to the > data sets the code should be applied to. Also - I have desribed what's > actually being done - in comments. > Thanks a lot to anyone for any suggestion! > > Dimitri > > ###### CREATING THE TEST DATA SET ################################ > > set.seed(123) > data<-data.frame(group=c(rep("first",10),rep("second",10)),week=c(1:10,1:10) > ,a=abs(round(rnorm(20)*10,0)), > b=abs(round(rnorm(20)*100,0))) > data > dim(data)[1] # !!! In real life I might have up to 150 (!) rows > (weeks) within each subgroup > > ### Specifying parameters used in the code below: > vars<-names(data)[3:4] # names of variables to be transformed > nr.vars<-length(vars) # number of variables to be transformed; !!! > in real life I'll have to deal with up to 50-60 variables, not 2. > group.var<-names(data)[1] # name of the grouping variable > subgroups<-levels(data[[group.var]]) # names of subgroups; !!! in > real life I'll have up to 20-25 subgroups, not 2. > > # For EACH subgroup: indexing variables a and b to their maximum in > that subgroup; > # Further, I'll have to use these indexed variables to build the new ones: > for(i in vars){ > new.name<-paste(i,".ind.to.max",sep="") > data[[new.name]]<-NA > } > > indexed.vars<-names(data)[grep("ind.to.max$", names(data))] # > variables indexed to subgroup max > for(subgroup in subgroups){ > data[data[[group.var]] %in% > subgroup,indexed.vars]<-lapply(data[data[[group.var]] %in% > subgroup,vars],function(x){ > y<-x/max(x) > return(y) > }) > } > data > > ############# DATA TRANSFORMATION ######################################### > > # Objective: Create new variables based on the old ones (a and b ind.to.max) > # For each new variable, the value in a given row is a function of (a) > 2 constants (that have several levels each), > # (b) the corresponding value of the original variable (e.g., > a.ind.to.max"), and the value in the previous row on the same new > variable > # PLUS: - it has to be done by subgroup (variable "group") > > constant1<-c(1:3) # constant 1 used for transformation - > has 3 levels; !!! in real life it will have up to 7 levels > constant2<-seq(.15,.45,.15) # constant 2 used for transformation - > has 3 levels; !!! in real life it will have up to 7 levels > > # CODE THAT IS TOO SLOW (it uses parameters specified in the previous > code section): > start1<-Sys.time() > for(var in indexed.vars){ # looping through variables > for(c1 in 1:length(constant1)){ # looping through levels of constant1 > for(c2 in 1:length(constant2)){ # looping through levels of > constant2 > d=log(0.5)/constant1[c1] > l=-log(1-constant2[c2]) > > name<-paste(strsplit(var,".ind.to.max"),constant1[c1],constant2[c2]*100,"..t > ransf",sep=".") > data[[name]]<-NA > for(subgroup in subgroups){ # looping through subgroups > data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][1] > 1-((1-0*exp(1)^d)/(exp(1)^(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, > var][1]*l*10))) # this is just the very first row of each subgroup > for(case in 2:nrow(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, ])){ > # looping through the remaining rows of the subgroup > data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, name][case]> 1-((1-data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, > name][case-1]*exp(1)^d)/(exp(1)^(data[data[[group.var]] %in% subgroup, > var][case]*l*10))) > } > } > } > } > } > end1<-Sys.time() > print(end1-start1) # Takes me ~0.53 secs > names(data) > data > > -- > Dimitri Liakhovitski > Ninah.com > Dimitri.Liakhovitski at ninah.com > > ______________________________________________ > R-help at r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help > PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. > >-- Dimitri Liakhovitski Ninah.com Dimitri.Liakhovitski at ninah.com ______________________________________________ R-help at r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
Sharpie
2010-Mar-27 21:50 UTC
[R] Competing with SPSS and SAS: improving code that loops throughrows (data manipulation)
hadley wickham wrote:> >> ?exp1^(a[case] * l * 10) >> >> would be better written out of the loop as >> >> ?b <- exp1^(a * l * 10) > > And even better as > > b <- exp(a * l * 10) > > Hadley >Aye, exp() functions tend to be heavily optimized compared to general functions such as `^` even if e is used as the base of the exponent. -Charlie ----- Charlie Sharpsteen Undergraduate-- Environmental Resources Engineering Humboldt State University -- View this message in context: http://n4.nabble.com/Competing-with-SPSS-and-SAS-improving-code-that-loops-through-rows-data-manipulation-tp1692848p1693763.html Sent from the R help mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
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