Joins in data.table

In this vignette you will learn how to perform any join operation using resources available in the data.table syntax.

It assumes familiarity with the data.table syntax. If that is not the case, please read the following vignettes:

  • vignette("datatable-intro", package="data.table")
  • vignette("datatable-reference-semantics", package="data.table")
  • vignette("datatable-keys-fast-subset", package="data.table")

1. Defining example data

To illustrate how to use the method available with real life examples, let’s simulate a normalized database from a little supermarket by performing the following steps:

  1. Defining a data.table where each product is represented by a row with some qualities, but leaving one product without id to show how the framework deals with missing values.
Products = data.table(
  id = c(1:4,
         NA_integer_),
  name = c("banana",
           "carrots",
           "popcorn",
           "soda",
           "toothpaste"),
  price = c(0.63,
            0.89,
            2.99,
            1.49,
            2.99),
  unit = c("unit",
           "lb",
           "unit",
           "ounce",
           "unit"),
  type = c(rep("natural", 2L),
           rep("processed", 3L))
)

Products
#       id       name price   unit      type
#    <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char>
# 1:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural
# 2:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural
# 3:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit processed
# 4:     4       soda  1.49  ounce processed
# 5:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit processed
  1. Defining a data.table showing the proportion of taxes to be applied for processed products based on their units.
NewTax = data.table(
  unit = c("unit","ounce"),
  type = "processed",
  tax_prop = c(0.65, 0.20)
)

NewTax
#      unit      type tax_prop
#    <char>    <char>    <num>
# 1:   unit processed     0.65
# 2:  ounce processed     0.20
  1. Defining a data.table simulating the products received every Monday with a product_id that is not present in the Products table.
set.seed(2156)

ProductReceived = data.table(
  id = 1:10,
  date = seq(from = as.IDate("2024-01-08"), length.out = 10L, by = "week"),
  product_id = sample(c(NA_integer_, 1:3, 6L), size = 10L, replace = TRUE),
  count = sample(c(50L, 100L, 150L), size = 10L, replace = TRUE)
)

ProductReceived
#        id       date product_id count
#     <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>
#  1:     1 2024-01-08         NA   150
#  2:     2 2024-01-15          1   100
#  3:     3 2024-01-22          6   100
#  4:     4 2024-01-29          1   150
#  5:     5 2024-02-05          2    50
#  6:     6 2024-02-12          1   150
#  7:     7 2024-02-19          2   150
#  8:     8 2024-02-26          2   100
#  9:     9 2024-03-04          1   100
# 10:    10 2024-03-11          3   150
  1. Defining a data.table to show some sales that can take place on weekdays with another product_id that is not present in the Products table.
sample_date = function(from, to, size, ...){
  all_days = seq(from = from, to = to, by = "day")
  weekdays = all_days[wday(all_days) %in% 2:6]
  days_sample = sample(weekdays, size, ...)
  days_sample_desc = sort(days_sample)
  days_sample_desc
}

set.seed(5415)

ProductSales = data.table(
  id = 1:10,
  date = ProductReceived[, sample_date(min(date), max(date), 10L)],
  product_id = sample(c(1:3, 7L), size = 10L, replace = TRUE),
  count = sample(c(50L, 100L, 150L), size = 10L, replace = TRUE)
)


ProductSales
#        id       date product_id count
#     <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>
#  1:     1 2024-01-08          7    50
#  2:     2 2024-01-11          2   150
#  3:     3 2024-01-18          1    50
#  4:     4 2024-01-25          1   100
#  5:     5 2024-01-26          3   100
#  6:     6 2024-02-02          3   150
#  7:     7 2024-02-06          2   150
#  8:     8 2024-02-15          7   150
#  9:     9 2024-02-27          1   150
# 10:    10 2024-03-08          1    50

2. data.table joining syntax

Before taking advantage of the data.table syntax to perform join operations we need to know which arguments can help us to perform successful joins.

The next diagram shows a description for each basic argument. In the following sections we will show how to use each of them and add more complexity little by little.

x[i, on, nomatch]
| |  |   |
| |  |   \__ If NULL only returns rows linked in x and i tables
| |  \____ a character vector o list defining match logict
| \_____ primary data.table, list or data.frame
\____ secondary data.table

Please keep in mind that the standard argument order in data.table is dt[i, j, by]. For join operations, it is recommended to pass the on and nomatch arguments by name to avoid using j and by when they are not needed.

3. Equi joins

This the most common and simple case as we can find common elements between tables to combine.

The relationship between tables can be:

  • One to one: When each matching value is unique on each table.
  • One to many: When some matching values are repeated in one of the table both unique in the other one.
  • Many to many: When the matching values are repeated several times on each table.

In most of the following examples we will perform one to many matches, but we are also going to take the time to explain the resources available to perform many to many matches.

3.1. Right join

Use this method if you need to combine columns from 2 tables based on one or more references but keeping all rows present in the table located on the right (in the the square brackets).

In our supermarket context, we can perform a right join to see more details about the products received as this is relation one to many by passing a vector to the on argument.

Products[ProductReceived,
         on = c(id = "product_id")]
#        id       name price   unit      type  i.id       date count
#     <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char> <int>     <IDat> <int>
#  1:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit processed     1 2024-01-08   150
#  2:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     2 2024-01-15   100
#  3:     6       <NA>    NA   <NA>      <NA>     3 2024-01-22   100
#  4:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     4 2024-01-29   150
#  5:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     5 2024-02-05    50
#  6:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     6 2024-02-12   150
#  7:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     7 2024-02-19   150
#  8:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     8 2024-02-26   100
#  9:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     9 2024-03-04   100
# 10:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit processed    10 2024-03-11   150

As many things have changed, let’s explain the new characteristics in the following groups:

  • Column level
    • The first group of columns in the new data.table comes from the x table.
    • The second group of columns in the new data.table comes from the i table.
    • If the join operation presents a present any name conflict (both table have same column name) the prefix i. is added to column names from the right-hand table (table on i position).
  • Row level
    • The missing product_id present on the ProductReceived table in row 1 was successfully matched with missing id of the Products table, so NA values are treated as any other value.
    • All rows from in the i table were kept including:
      • Not matching rows like the one with product_id = 6.
      • Rows that repeat the same product_id several times.

3.1.1. Joining by a list argument

If you are following the vignette, you might have found out that we used a vector to define the relations between tables in the on argument, that is really useful if you are creating your own functions, but another alternative is to use a list to define the columns to match.

To use this capacity, we have 2 equivalent alternatives:

  • Wrapping the related columns in the base R list function.
Products[ProductReceived,
         on = list(id = product_id)]
  • Wrapping the related columns in the data.table list alias ..
Products[ProductReceived,
         on = .(id = product_id)]

3.1.2. Alternatives to define the on argument

In all the prior example we have pass the column names we want to match to the on argument but data.table also have alternatives to that syntax.

  • Natural join: Selects the columns to perform the match based on common column names. To illustrate this method, let’s change the column of Products table from id to product_id and use the keyword .NATURAL.
ProductsChangedName = setnames(copy(Products), "id", "product_id")
ProductsChangedName
#    product_id       name price   unit      type
#         <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char>
# 1:          1     banana  0.63   unit   natural
# 2:          2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural
# 3:          3    popcorn  2.99   unit processed
# 4:          4       soda  1.49  ounce processed
# 5:         NA toothpaste  2.99   unit processed

ProductsChangedName[ProductReceived, on = .NATURAL]
#     product_id       name price   unit      type    id       date count
#          <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char> <int>     <IDat> <int>
#  1:         NA toothpaste  2.99   unit processed     1 2024-01-08   150
#  2:          1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     2 2024-01-15   100
#  3:          6       <NA>    NA   <NA>      <NA>     3 2024-01-22   100
#  4:          1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     4 2024-01-29   150
#  5:          2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     5 2024-02-05    50
#  6:          1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     6 2024-02-12   150
#  7:          2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     7 2024-02-19   150
#  8:          2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     8 2024-02-26   100
#  9:          1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     9 2024-03-04   100
# 10:          3    popcorn  2.99   unit processed    10 2024-03-11   150
  • Keyed join: Selects the columns to perform the match based on keyed columns regardless of their names.To illustrate this method, we need to define keys in the same order for both tables.
ProductsKeyed = setkey(copy(Products), id)
key(ProductsKeyed)
# [1] "id"

ProductReceivedKeyed = setkey(copy(ProductReceived), product_id)
key(ProductReceivedKeyed)
# [1] "product_id"

ProductsKeyed[ProductReceivedKeyed]
# Key: <id>
#        id       name price   unit      type  i.id       date count
#     <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char> <int>     <IDat> <int>
#  1:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit processed     1 2024-01-08   150
#  2:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     2 2024-01-15   100
#  3:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     4 2024-01-29   150
#  4:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     6 2024-02-12   150
#  5:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     9 2024-03-04   100
#  6:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     5 2024-02-05    50
#  7:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     7 2024-02-19   150
#  8:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     8 2024-02-26   100
#  9:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit processed    10 2024-03-11   150
# 10:     6       <NA>    NA   <NA>      <NA>     3 2024-01-22   100

3.1.3. Operations after joining

Most of the time after a join is complete we need to make some additional transformations. To make so we have the following alternatives:

  • Chaining a new instruction by adding a pair of brakes [].
  • Passing a list with the columns that we want to keep or create to the j argument.

Our recommendation is to use the second alternative if possible, as it is faster and uses less memory than the first one.

Managing shared column Names with the j argument

The j argument has great alternatives to manage joins with tables sharing the same names for several columns. By default all columns are taking their source from the the x table, but we can also use the x. prefix to make clear the source and use the prefix i. to use any column form the table declared in the i argument of the x table.

Going back to the little supermarket, after updating the ProductReceived table with the Products table, it seems convenient apply the following changes:

  • Changing the columns names from id to product_id and from i.id to received_id.
  • Adding the total_value.
Products[
  ProductReceived,
  on = c("id" = "product_id"),
  j = .(product_id = x.id,
        name = x.name,
        price,
        received_id = i.id,
        date = i.date,
        count,
        total_value = price * count)
]
#     product_id       name price received_id       date count total_value
#          <int>     <char> <num>       <int>     <IDat> <int>       <num>
#  1:         NA toothpaste  2.99           1 2024-01-08   150       448.5
#  2:          1     banana  0.63           2 2024-01-15   100        63.0
#  3:         NA       <NA>    NA           3 2024-01-22   100          NA
#  4:          1     banana  0.63           4 2024-01-29   150        94.5
#  5:          2    carrots  0.89           5 2024-02-05    50        44.5
#  6:          1     banana  0.63           6 2024-02-12   150        94.5
#  7:          2    carrots  0.89           7 2024-02-19   150       133.5
#  8:          2    carrots  0.89           8 2024-02-26   100        89.0
#  9:          1     banana  0.63           9 2024-03-04   100        63.0
# 10:          3    popcorn  2.99          10 2024-03-11   150       448.5
Summarizing with on in data.table

We can also use this alternative to return aggregated results based columns present in the x table.

For example, we might interested in how much money we expend buying products each date regardless the products.

dt1 = ProductReceived[
  Products,
  on = c("product_id" = "id"),
  by = .EACHI,
  j = .(total_value_received  = sum(price * count))
]


dt2 = ProductReceived[
  Products,
  on = c("product_id" = "id"),
][, .(total_value_received  = sum(price * count)),
  by = "product_id"
]

identical(dt1, dt2)
# [1] TRUE

3.1.4. Joining based on several columns

So far we have just joined data.table base on 1 column, but it’s important to know that the package can join tables matching several columns.

To illustrate this, let’s assume that we want to add the tax_prop from NewTax to update the Products table.

NewTax[Products, on = c("unit", "type")]
#      unit      type tax_prop    id       name price
#    <char>    <char>    <num> <int>     <char> <num>
# 1:   unit   natural       NA     1     banana  0.63
# 2:     lb   natural       NA     2    carrots  0.89
# 3:   unit processed     0.65     3    popcorn  2.99
# 4:  ounce processed     0.20     4       soda  1.49
# 5:   unit processed     0.65    NA toothpaste  2.99

3.2. Inner join

Use this method if you need to combine columns from 2 tables based on one or more references but keeping only rows matched in both tables.

To perform this operation we just need to add nomatch = NULL or nomatch = 0 to any of the prior join operations to return the same results.

# First Table
Products[ProductReceived,
         on = c("id" = "product_id"),
         nomatch = NULL]
#       id       name price   unit      type  i.id       date count
#    <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char> <int>     <IDat> <int>
# 1:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit processed     1 2024-01-08   150
# 2:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     2 2024-01-15   100
# 3:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     4 2024-01-29   150
# 4:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     5 2024-02-05    50
# 5:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     6 2024-02-12   150
# 6:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     7 2024-02-19   150
# 7:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     8 2024-02-26   100
# 8:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     9 2024-03-04   100
# 9:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit processed    10 2024-03-11   150

# Second Table
ProductReceived[Products,
                on = .(product_id = id),
                nomatch = NULL]
#       id       date product_id count       name price   unit      type
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char>
# 1:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     banana  0.63   unit   natural
# 2:     4 2024-01-29          1   150     banana  0.63   unit   natural
# 3:     6 2024-02-12          1   150     banana  0.63   unit   natural
# 4:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     banana  0.63   unit   natural
# 5:     5 2024-02-05          2    50    carrots  0.89     lb   natural
# 6:     7 2024-02-19          2   150    carrots  0.89     lb   natural
# 7:     8 2024-02-26          2   100    carrots  0.89     lb   natural
# 8:    10 2024-03-11          3   150    popcorn  2.99   unit processed
# 9:     1 2024-01-08         NA   150 toothpaste  2.99   unit processed

Despite both tables have the same information, they present some relevant differences:

  • They present different order for their columns
  • They have some name differences on their columns names:
    • The id column of first table has the same information as the product_id in the second table.
    • The i.id column of first table has the same information as the id in the second table.

3.3. Not join

This method keeps only the rows that don’t match with any row of a second table.

To apply this technique we just need to negate (!) the table located on the i argument.

Products[!ProductReceived,
         on = c("id" = "product_id")]
#       id   name price   unit      type
#    <int> <char> <num> <char>    <char>
# 1:     4   soda  1.49  ounce processed

As you can see, the result only has ‘banana’, as it was the only product that is not present in the ProductReceived table.

ProductReceived[!Products,
                on = c("product_id" = "id")]
#       id       date product_id count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>
# 1:     3 2024-01-22          6   100

In this case, the operation returns the row with product_id = 6, as it is not present on the Products table.

3.4. Semi join

This method extract keeps only the rows that match with any row in a second table without combining the column of the tables.

It’s very similar to subset as join, but as in this time we are passing a complete table to the i we need to ensure that:

  • Any row in the x table is duplicated due row duplication in the table passed to the i argument.

  • All the renaming rows from x should keep the original row order.

To make this, you can apply the following steps:

  1. Perform a inner join with which = TRUE to save the row numbers related to each matching row of the x table.
SubSetRows = Products[
  ProductReceived,
  on = .(id = product_id),
  nomatch = NULL,
  which = TRUE
]

SubSetRows
# [1] 5 1 1 2 1 2 2 1 3
  1. Select and sort the unique rows ids.
SubSetRowsSorted = sort(unique(SubSetRows))

SubSetRowsSorted
# [1] 1 2 3 5
  1. Selecting the x rows to keep.
Products[SubSetRowsSorted]
#       id       name price   unit      type
#    <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char>
# 1:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural
# 2:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural
# 3:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit processed
# 4:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit processed

3.5. Left join

Use this method if you need to combine columns from 2 tables based on one or more references but keeping all rows present in the table located on the left.

To perform this operation, we just need to exchange the order between both tables and the columns names in the on argument.

ProductReceived[Products,
                on = list(product_id = id)]
#        id       date product_id count       name price   unit      type
#     <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char>
#  1:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     banana  0.63   unit   natural
#  2:     4 2024-01-29          1   150     banana  0.63   unit   natural
#  3:     6 2024-02-12          1   150     banana  0.63   unit   natural
#  4:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     banana  0.63   unit   natural
#  5:     5 2024-02-05          2    50    carrots  0.89     lb   natural
#  6:     7 2024-02-19          2   150    carrots  0.89     lb   natural
#  7:     8 2024-02-26          2   100    carrots  0.89     lb   natural
#  8:    10 2024-03-11          3   150    popcorn  2.99   unit processed
#  9:    NA       <NA>          4    NA       soda  1.49  ounce processed
# 10:     1 2024-01-08         NA   150 toothpaste  2.99   unit processed

Here some important considerations:

  • Column level
    • The first group of columns now comes from the ProductReceived table as it is the x table.
    • The second group of columns now comes from the Products table as it is the i table.
    • It didn’t add the prefix i. to any column.
  • Row level
    • All rows from in the i table were kept as we never received any banana but row is still part of the results.
    • The row related to product_id = 6 is no part of the results any more as it is not present in the Products table.

3.5.1. Joining after chain operations

One of the key features of data.table is that we can apply several operations before saving our final results by chaining brackets.

DT[
  ...
][
  ...
][
  ...
]

So far, if after applying all that operations we want to join new columns without removing any row, we would need to stop the chaining process, save a temporary table and later apply the join operation.

To avoid that situation, we can use special symbols .SD, to apply a right join based on the changed table.

NewTax[Products,
       on = c("unit", "type")
][, ProductReceived[.SD,
                    on = list(product_id = id)],
  .SDcols = !c("unit", "type")]
#        id       date product_id count tax_prop       name price
#     <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>    <num>     <char> <num>
#  1:     2 2024-01-15          1   100       NA     banana  0.63
#  2:     4 2024-01-29          1   150       NA     banana  0.63
#  3:     6 2024-02-12          1   150       NA     banana  0.63
#  4:     9 2024-03-04          1   100       NA     banana  0.63
#  5:     5 2024-02-05          2    50       NA    carrots  0.89
#  6:     7 2024-02-19          2   150       NA    carrots  0.89
#  7:     8 2024-02-26          2   100       NA    carrots  0.89
#  8:    10 2024-03-11          3   150     0.65    popcorn  2.99
#  9:    NA       <NA>          4    NA     0.20       soda  1.49
# 10:     1 2024-01-08         NA   150     0.65 toothpaste  2.99

3.6. Many to many join

Sometimes we want to join tables based on columns with duplicated id values to later perform some transformations later.

To illustrate this situation let’s take as an example the product_id == 1L, which have 4 rows in our ProductReceived table.

ProductReceived[product_id == 1L]
#       id       date product_id count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>
# 1:     2 2024-01-15          1   100
# 2:     4 2024-01-29          1   150
# 3:     6 2024-02-12          1   150
# 4:     9 2024-03-04          1   100

And 4 rows in our ProductSales table.

ProductSales[product_id == 1L]
#       id       date product_id count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>
# 1:     3 2024-01-18          1    50
# 2:     4 2024-01-25          1   100
# 3:     9 2024-02-27          1   150
# 4:    10 2024-03-08          1    50

To perform this join we just need to filter product_id == 1L in the i table to limit the join just to that product and set the argument allow.cartesian = TRUE to allow combining each row from one table with every row from the other table.

ProductReceived[ProductSales[list(1L),
                             on = "product_id",
                             nomatch = NULL],
                on = "product_id",
                allow.cartesian = TRUE]
#        id       date product_id count  i.id     i.date i.count
#     <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int> <int>     <IDat>   <int>
#  1:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     3 2024-01-18      50
#  2:     4 2024-01-29          1   150     3 2024-01-18      50
#  3:     6 2024-02-12          1   150     3 2024-01-18      50
#  4:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     3 2024-01-18      50
#  5:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     4 2024-01-25     100
#  6:     4 2024-01-29          1   150     4 2024-01-25     100
#  7:     6 2024-02-12          1   150     4 2024-01-25     100
#  8:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     4 2024-01-25     100
#  9:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     9 2024-02-27     150
# 10:     4 2024-01-29          1   150     9 2024-02-27     150
# 11:     6 2024-02-12          1   150     9 2024-02-27     150
# 12:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     9 2024-02-27     150
# 13:     2 2024-01-15          1   100    10 2024-03-08      50
# 14:     4 2024-01-29          1   150    10 2024-03-08      50
# 15:     6 2024-02-12          1   150    10 2024-03-08      50
# 16:     9 2024-03-04          1   100    10 2024-03-08      50

Once we understand the result, we can apply the same process for all products.

ProductReceived[ProductSales,
                on = "product_id",
                allow.cartesian = TRUE]
#        id       date product_id count  i.id     i.date i.count
#     <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int> <int>     <IDat>   <int>
#  1:    NA       <NA>          7    NA     1 2024-01-08      50
#  2:     5 2024-02-05          2    50     2 2024-01-11     150
#  3:     7 2024-02-19          2   150     2 2024-01-11     150
#  4:     8 2024-02-26          2   100     2 2024-01-11     150
#  5:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     3 2024-01-18      50
#  6:     4 2024-01-29          1   150     3 2024-01-18      50
#  7:     6 2024-02-12          1   150     3 2024-01-18      50
#  8:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     3 2024-01-18      50
#  9:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     4 2024-01-25     100
# 10:     4 2024-01-29          1   150     4 2024-01-25     100
# 11:     6 2024-02-12          1   150     4 2024-01-25     100
# 12:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     4 2024-01-25     100
# 13:    10 2024-03-11          3   150     5 2024-01-26     100
# 14:    10 2024-03-11          3   150     6 2024-02-02     150
# 15:     5 2024-02-05          2    50     7 2024-02-06     150
# 16:     7 2024-02-19          2   150     7 2024-02-06     150
# 17:     8 2024-02-26          2   100     7 2024-02-06     150
# 18:    NA       <NA>          7    NA     8 2024-02-15     150
# 19:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     9 2024-02-27     150
# 20:     4 2024-01-29          1   150     9 2024-02-27     150
# 21:     6 2024-02-12          1   150     9 2024-02-27     150
# 22:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     9 2024-02-27     150
# 23:     2 2024-01-15          1   100    10 2024-03-08      50
# 24:     4 2024-01-29          1   150    10 2024-03-08      50
# 25:     6 2024-02-12          1   150    10 2024-03-08      50
# 26:     9 2024-03-04          1   100    10 2024-03-08      50
#        id       date product_id count  i.id     i.date i.count

allow.cartesian is defaulted to FALSE as this is seldom what the user wants, and such a cross join can lead to a very large number of rows in the result. For example, if Table A has 100 rows and Table B has 50 rows, their Cartesian product would result in 5000 rows (100 * 50). This can quickly become memory-intensive for large datasets.

3.6.1. Selecting one match

After joining the table we might find out that we just need to return a single join to extract the information we need. In this case we have 2 alternatives:

  • We can select the first match, represented in the next example by id = 2.
ProductReceived[ProductSales[product_id == 1L],
                on = .(product_id),
                allow.cartesian = TRUE,
                mult = "first"]
#       id       date product_id count  i.id     i.date i.count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int> <int>     <IDat>   <int>
# 1:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     3 2024-01-18      50
# 2:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     4 2024-01-25     100
# 3:     2 2024-01-15          1   100     9 2024-02-27     150
# 4:     2 2024-01-15          1   100    10 2024-03-08      50
  • We can select the last match, represented in the next example by id = 9.
ProductReceived[ProductSales[product_id == 1L],
                on = .(product_id),
                allow.cartesian = TRUE,
                mult = "last"]
#       id       date product_id count  i.id     i.date i.count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int> <int>     <IDat>   <int>
# 1:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     3 2024-01-18      50
# 2:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     4 2024-01-25     100
# 3:     9 2024-03-04          1   100     9 2024-02-27     150
# 4:     9 2024-03-04          1   100    10 2024-03-08      50

3.6.2. Cross join

If you want to get all possible row combinations regardless of any particular id column we can follow the next process:

  1. Create a new column in both tables with a constant.
ProductsTempId = copy(Products)[, temp_id := 1L]
  1. Join both table based on the new column and remove it after ending the process, as it doesn’t have reason to stay after joining.
AllProductsMix =
  ProductsTempId[ProductsTempId,
                 on = "temp_id",
                 allow.cartesian = TRUE]

AllProductsMix[, temp_id := NULL]

# Removing type to make easier to see the result when printing the table
AllProductsMix[, !c("type", "i.type")]
#        id       name price   unit  i.id     i.name i.price i.unit
#     <int>     <char> <num> <char> <int>     <char>   <num> <char>
#  1:     1     banana  0.63   unit     1     banana    0.63   unit
#  2:     2    carrots  0.89     lb     1     banana    0.63   unit
#  3:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit     1     banana    0.63   unit
#  4:     4       soda  1.49  ounce     1     banana    0.63   unit
#  5:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit     1     banana    0.63   unit
#  6:     1     banana  0.63   unit     2    carrots    0.89     lb
#  7:     2    carrots  0.89     lb     2    carrots    0.89     lb
#  8:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit     2    carrots    0.89     lb
#  9:     4       soda  1.49  ounce     2    carrots    0.89     lb
# 10:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit     2    carrots    0.89     lb
# 11:     1     banana  0.63   unit     3    popcorn    2.99   unit
# 12:     2    carrots  0.89     lb     3    popcorn    2.99   unit
# 13:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit     3    popcorn    2.99   unit
# 14:     4       soda  1.49  ounce     3    popcorn    2.99   unit
# 15:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit     3    popcorn    2.99   unit
# 16:     1     banana  0.63   unit     4       soda    1.49  ounce
# 17:     2    carrots  0.89     lb     4       soda    1.49  ounce
# 18:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit     4       soda    1.49  ounce
# 19:     4       soda  1.49  ounce     4       soda    1.49  ounce
# 20:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit     4       soda    1.49  ounce
# 21:     1     banana  0.63   unit    NA toothpaste    2.99   unit
# 22:     2    carrots  0.89     lb    NA toothpaste    2.99   unit
# 23:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit    NA toothpaste    2.99   unit
# 24:     4       soda  1.49  ounce    NA toothpaste    2.99   unit
# 25:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit    NA toothpaste    2.99   unit
#        id       name price   unit  i.id     i.name i.price i.unit

3.7. Full join

Use this method if you need to combine columns from 2 tables based on one or more references without removing any row.

As we saw in the previous section, any of the prior operations can keep the missing product_id = 6 and the soda (product_id = 4) as part of the results.

To save this problem, we can use the merge function even thought it is lower than using the native data.table’s joining syntax.

merge(x = Products,
      y = ProductReceived,
      by.x = "id",
      by.y = "product_id",
      all = TRUE,
      sort = FALSE)
#        id       name price   unit      type  id.y       date count
#     <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char> <int>     <IDat> <int>
#  1:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     2 2024-01-15   100
#  2:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     4 2024-01-29   150
#  3:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     6 2024-02-12   150
#  4:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural     9 2024-03-04   100
#  5:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     5 2024-02-05    50
#  6:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     7 2024-02-19   150
#  7:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural     8 2024-02-26   100
#  8:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit processed    10 2024-03-11   150
#  9:     4       soda  1.49  ounce processed    NA       <NA>    NA
# 10:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit processed     1 2024-01-08   150
# 11:     6       <NA>    NA   <NA>      <NA>     3 2024-01-22   100

4. Non-equi join

A non-equi join is a type of join where the condition for matching rows is not based on equality, but on other comparison operators like <, >, <=, or >=. This allows for more flexible joining criteria. In data.table, non-equi joins are particularly useful for operations like:

  • Finding the nearest match
  • Comparing ranges of values between tables

It’s a great alternative if after applying a right of inner join:

  • You want to decrease the number of returned rows based on comparing numeric columns of different table.
  • You don’t need to keep the columns from table x(secondary data.table) in the final table.

To illustrate how this work, let’s center over attention on how are the sales and receives for product 2.

ProductSalesProd2 = ProductSales[product_id == 2L]
ProductReceivedProd2 = ProductReceived[product_id == 2L]

If want to know, for example, if can find any receive that took place before a sales date, we can apply the next code.

ProductReceivedProd2[ProductSalesProd2,
                     on = "product_id",
                     allow.cartesian = TRUE
][date < i.date]
#       id       date product_id count  i.id     i.date i.count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int> <int>     <IDat>   <int>
# 1:     5 2024-02-05          2    50     7 2024-02-06     150

What does happen if we just apply the same logic on the list passed to on?

  • As this opperation it’s still a right join, it returns all rows from the i table, but only shows the values for id and count when the rules are met.

  • The date related ProductReceivedProd2 was omited from this new table.

ProductReceivedProd2[ProductSalesProd2,
                     on = list(product_id, date < date)]
#       id       date product_id count  i.id i.count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int> <int>   <int>
# 1:    NA 2024-01-11          2    NA     2     150
# 2:     5 2024-02-06          2    50     7     150

Now, after applying the join, we can limit the results only show the cases that meet all joining criteria.

ProductReceivedProd2[ProductSalesProd2,
                     on = list(product_id, date < date),
                     nomatch = NULL]
#       id       date product_id count  i.id i.count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int> <int>   <int>
# 1:     5 2024-02-06          2    50     7     150

5. Rolling join

Rolling joins are particularly useful in time-series data analysis. They allow you to match rows based on the nearest value in a sorted column, typically a date or time column.

This is valuable when you need to align data from different sources that may not have exactly matching timestamps, or when you want to carry forward the most recent value.

For example, in financial data, you might use a rolling join to assign the most recent stock price to each transaction, even if the price updates and transactions don’t occur at the exact same times.

In our supermarket example, we can use a rolling join to match sales with the most recent product information.

Let’s assume that the price for Bananas and Carrots changes at the first date of each month.

ProductPriceHistory = data.table(
  product_id = rep(1:2, each = 3),
  date = rep(as.IDate(c("2024-01-01", "2024-02-01", "2024-03-01")), 2),
  price = c(0.59, 0.63, 0.65,  # Banana prices
            0.79, 0.89, 0.99)  # Carrot prices
)

ProductPriceHistory
#    product_id       date price
#         <int>     <IDat> <num>
# 1:          1 2024-01-01  0.59
# 2:          1 2024-02-01  0.63
# 3:          1 2024-03-01  0.65
# 4:          2 2024-01-01  0.79
# 5:          2 2024-02-01  0.89
# 6:          2 2024-03-01  0.99

Now, we can perform a right join giving a different prices for each product based on the sale date.

ProductPriceHistory[ProductSales,
                    on = .(product_id, date),
                    roll = TRUE,
                    j = .(product_id, date, count, price)]
#     product_id       date count price
#          <int>     <IDat> <int> <num>
#  1:          7 2024-01-08    50    NA
#  2:          2 2024-01-11   150  0.79
#  3:          1 2024-01-18    50  0.59
#  4:          1 2024-01-25   100  0.59
#  5:          3 2024-01-26   100    NA
#  6:          3 2024-02-02   150    NA
#  7:          2 2024-02-06   150  0.89
#  8:          7 2024-02-15   150    NA
#  9:          1 2024-02-27   150  0.63
# 10:          1 2024-03-08    50  0.65

If we just want to see the matching cases we just need to add the argument nomatch = NULL to perform an inner rolling join.

ProductPriceHistory[ProductSales,
                    on = .(product_id, date),
                    roll = TRUE,
                    nomatch = NULL,
                    j = .(product_id, date, count, price)]
#    product_id       date count price
#         <int>     <IDat> <int> <num>
# 1:          2 2024-01-11   150  0.79
# 2:          1 2024-01-18    50  0.59
# 3:          1 2024-01-25   100  0.59
# 4:          2 2024-02-06   150  0.89
# 5:          1 2024-02-27   150  0.63
# 6:          1 2024-03-08    50  0.65

7. Taking advange of joining speed

7.1. Subsets as joins

As we just saw in the prior section the x table gets filtered by the values available in the i table. Actually, that process is faster than passing a Boolean expression to the i argument.

To filter the x table at speed we don’t to pass a complete data.table, we can pass a list() of vectors with the values that we want to keep or omit from the original table.

For example, to filter dates where the market received 100 units of bananas (product_id = 1) or popcorn (product_id = 3) we can use the following:

ProductReceived[list(c(1L, 3L), 100L),
                on = c("product_id", "count")]
#       id       date product_id count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>
# 1:     2 2024-01-15          1   100
# 2:     9 2024-03-04          1   100
# 3:    NA       <NA>          3   100

As at the end, we are filtering based on a join operation the code returned a row that was not present in original table. To avoid that behavior, it is recommended to always to add the argument nomatch = NULL.

ProductReceived[list(c(1L, 3L), 100L),
                on = c("product_id", "count"),
                nomatch = NULL]
#       id       date product_id count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>
# 1:     2 2024-01-15          1   100
# 2:     9 2024-03-04          1   100

We can also use this technique to filter out any combination of values by prefixing them with ! to negate the expression in the i argument and keeping the nomatch with its default value. For example, we can filter out the 2 rows we filtered before.

ProductReceived[!list(c(1L, 3L), 100L),
                on = c("product_id", "count")]
#       id       date product_id count
#    <int>     <IDat>      <int> <int>
# 1:     1 2024-01-08         NA   150
# 2:     3 2024-01-22          6   100
# 3:     4 2024-01-29          1   150
# 4:     5 2024-02-05          2    50
# 5:     6 2024-02-12          1   150
# 6:     7 2024-02-19          2   150
# 7:     8 2024-02-26          2   100
# 8:    10 2024-03-11          3   150

If you just want to filter a value for a single character column, you can omit calling the list() function pass the value to been filtered in the i argument.

Products[c("banana","popcorn"),
         on = "name",
         nomatch = NULL]
#       id    name price   unit      type
#    <int>  <char> <num> <char>    <char>
# 1:     1  banana  0.63   unit   natural
# 2:     3 popcorn  2.99   unit processed

Products[!"popcorn",
         on = "name"]
#       id       name price   unit      type
#    <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char>
# 1:     1     banana  0.63   unit   natural
# 2:     2    carrots  0.89     lb   natural
# 3:     4       soda  1.49  ounce processed
# 4:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit processed

7.2. Updating by reference

The := operator in data.table is used for updating or adding columns by reference. This means it modifies the original data.table without creating a copy, which is very memory-efficient, especially for large datasets. When used inside a data.table, := allows you to add new columns or modify existing ones as part of your query.

Let’s update our Products table with the latest price from ProductPriceHistory:

copy(Products)[ProductPriceHistory,
               on = .(id = product_id),
               j = `:=`(price = tail(i.price, 1),
                        last_updated = tail(i.date, 1)),
               by = .EACHI][]
#       id       name price   unit      type last_updated
#    <int>     <char> <num> <char>    <char>       <IDat>
# 1:     1     banana  0.65   unit   natural   2024-03-01
# 2:     2    carrots  0.99     lb   natural   2024-03-01
# 3:     3    popcorn  2.99   unit processed         <NA>
# 4:     4       soda  1.49  ounce processed         <NA>
# 5:    NA toothpaste  2.99   unit processed         <NA>

In this operation:

  • The function copy prevent that := changes by reference the Products table.s
  • We join Products with ProductPriceHistory based on id and product_id.
  • We update the price column with the latest price from ProductPriceHistory.
  • We add a new last_updated column to track when the price was last changed.
  • The by = .EACHI ensures that the tail function is applied for each product in ProductPriceHistory.