Find duplicated values
vec_duplicate_any()
: detects the presence of duplicated values,
similar to anyDuplicated()
.
vec_duplicate_detect()
: returns a logical vector describing if each
element of the vector is duplicated elsewhere. Unlike duplicated()
, it
reports all duplicated values, not just the second and subsequent
repetitions.
vec_duplicate_id()
: returns an integer vector giving the location of
the first occurrence of the value.
vec_duplicate_any(x) vec_duplicate_detect(x) vec_duplicate_id(x)
x |
A vector (including a data frame). |
vec_duplicate_any()
: a logical vector of length 1.
vec_duplicate_detect()
: a logical vector the same length as x
.
vec_duplicate_id()
: an integer vector the same length as x
.
In most cases, missing values are not considered to be equal, i.e.
NA == NA
is not TRUE
. This behaviour would be unappealing here,
so these functions consider all NAs
to be equal. (Similarly,
all NaN
are also considered to be equal.)
vec_unique()
for functions that work with the dual of duplicated
values: unique values.
vec_duplicate_any(1:10) vec_duplicate_any(c(1, 1:10)) x <- c(10, 10, 20, 30, 30, 40) vec_duplicate_detect(x) # Note that `duplicated()` doesn't consider the first instance to # be a duplicate duplicated(x) # Identify elements of a vector by the location of the first element that # they're equal to: vec_duplicate_id(x) # Location of the unique values: vec_unique_loc(x) # Equivalent to `duplicated()`: vec_duplicate_id(x) == seq_along(x)
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