I have a sample dataframe "data" as follows:
X Y Month Year income
2281205 228120 3 2011 1000
2281212 228121 9 2010 1100
2281213 228121 12 2010 900
2281214 228121 3 2011 9000
2281222 228122 6 2010 1111
2281223 228122 9 2010 3000
2281224 228122 12 2010 1889
2281225 228122 3 2011 778
2281243 228124 12 2010 1111
2281244 228124 3 2011 200
2281282 228128 9 2010 7889
2281283 228128 12 2010 2900
2281284 228128 3 2011 3400
2281302 228130 9 2010 1200
2281303 228130 12 2010 2000
2281304 228130 3 2011 1900
2281352 228135 9 2010 2300
2281353 228135 12 2010 1333
2281354 228135 3 2011 2340
I want to use the ddply
to compute the income for each Y
(not X
), if I have four observations for each Y (for example for 2281223 with months 6,9,12 of 2010 and month 3 of 2011). If I have less than four observations (for example for Y =228130), I want to simply ignore it. I use the following commands in R
for the above purpose:
require(plyr)
# the data are in the data csv file
data<-read.csv("data.csv")
# convert Y (integers) into factors
y<-as.factor(y)
# get the count of each unique Y
count<-ddply(data,.(Y), summarize, freq=length(Y))
# get the sum of each unique Y
sum<-ddply(data,.(Y),summarize,tot=sum(income))
# show the sum if number of observations for each Y is less than 4
colbind<-cbind(count,sum)
finalsum<-subset(colbind,freq>3)
My output are as follows:
>colbind
Y freq Y tot
1 228120 1 228120 1000
2 228121 3 228121 11000
3 228122 4 228122 6778
4 228124 2 228124 1311
5 228128 3 228128 14189
6 228130 3 228130 5100
7 228135 3 228135 5973
>finalsum
Y freq Y.1 tot
3 228122 4 228122 6778
The above code works, but requires many steps. So,I would like to know whether there is a simple way of performing the above task (using the plyr package).
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