Great solution! Thanks! Ben
On Sat, May 12, 2012 at 12:50 PM, jim holtman <jholt...@gmail.com> wrote: > Here is an example of how you might do it. It uses a technique of > counting how many items are in a queue based on their arrival times; > it can be used to also find areas of overlap. > > Note that it would be best to use a list for the 's' end points > > ================================ > > # note the next statement removes names of the format 's[0-9]+_rng' > > # it would be best to create a list with the 's' endpoints, but this is > > # what the OP specified > > > > rm(list = grep('s[0-9]+_rng', ls(), value = TRUE)) # Danger Will > Robinson!! > > > > # ex 1 > > x_rng = c(-100,100) > > > > s1_rng = c(-25.5,30) > > s2_rng = c(0.77,10) > > s3_rng = c(25,35) > > s4_rng = c(70,80.3) > > s5_rng = c(90,95) > > > > # ex 2 > > # x_rng = c(-50.5,100) > > > > # s1_rng = c(-75.3,30) > > > > # ex 3 > > # x_rng = c(-75.3,30) > > > > # s1_rng = c(-50.5,100) > > > > # ex 4 > > # x_rng = c(-100,100) > > > > # s1_rng = c(-105,105) > > > > # find all the names -- USE A LIST NEXT TIME > > sNames <- grep("s[0-9]+_rng", ls(), value = TRUE) > > > > # initial matrix with the 'x' endpoints > > queue <- rbind(c(x_rng[1], 1), c(x_rng[2], 1)) > > > > # add the 's' end points to the list > > # this will be used to determine how many things are in a queue (or > areas that > > # overlap) > > for (i in sNames){ > + queue <- rbind(queue > + , c(get(i)[1], 1) # enter queue > + , c(get(i)[2], -1) # exit queue > + ) > + } > > queue <- queue[order(queue[, 1]), ] # sort > > queue <- cbind(queue, cumsum(queue[, 2])) # of people in the queue > > print(queue) > [,1] [,2] [,3] > [1,] -100.00 1 1 > [2,] -25.50 1 2 > [3,] 0.77 1 3 > [4,] 10.00 -1 2 > [5,] 25.00 1 3 > [6,] 30.00 -1 2 > [7,] 35.00 -1 1 > [8,] 70.00 1 2 > [9,] 80.30 -1 1 > [10,] 90.00 1 2 > [11,] 95.00 -1 1 > [12,] 100.00 1 2 > > > > # print out values where the last column is 1 > > for (i in which(queue[, 3] == 1)){ > + cat("start:", queue[i, 1L], ' end:', queue[i + 1L, 1L], "\n") > + } > start: -100 end: -25.5 > start: 35 end: 70 > start: 80.3 end: 90 > start: 95 end: 100 > > > > > ========================================= > > On Sat, May 12, 2012 at 1:54 PM, Ben quant <ccqu...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hello, > > > > I'm posting this again (with some small edits). I didn't get any replies > > last time...hoping for some this time. :) > > > > Currently I'm only coming up with brute force solutions to this issue > > (loops). I'm wondering if anyone has a better way to do this. Thank you > for > > your help in advance! > > > > The problem: I have endpoints of one x range (x_rng) and an unknown > number > > of s ranges (s[#]_rng) also defined by the range endpoints. I'd like to > > remove the x ranges that overlap with the s ranges. The examples below > > demonstrate what I mean. > > > > What is the best way to do this? > > > > Ex 1. > > For: > > x_rng = c(-100,100) > > > > s1_rng = c(-25.5,30) > > s2_rng = c(0.77,10) > > s3_rng = c(25,35) > > s4_rng = c(70,80.3) > > s5_rng = c(90,95) > > > > I would get: > > -100,-25.5 > > 35,70 > > 80.3,90 > > 95,100 > > > > Ex 2. > > For: > > x_rng = c(-50.5,100) > > > > s1_rng = c(-75.3,30) > > > > I would get: > > 30,100 > > > > Ex 3. > > For: > > x_rng = c(-75.3,30) > > > > s1_rng = c(-50.5,100) > > > > I would get: > > -75.3,-50.5 > > > > Ex 4. > > For: > > x_rng = c(-100,100) > > > > s1_rng = c(-105,105) > > > > I would get something like: > > NA,NA > > or... > > NA > > > > Ex 5. > > For: > > x_rng = c(-100,100) > > > > s1_rng = c(-100,100) > > > > I would get something like: > > -100,-100 > > 100,100 > > or just... > > -100 > > 100 > > > > PS - You may have noticed that in all of the examples I am including the > s > > range endpoints in the desired results, which I can deal with later in my > > program so its not a problem... I think leaving in the s range endpoints > > simplifies the problem. > > > > Thanks! > > Ben > > > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > > > > ______________________________________________ > > R-help@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 Holtman > Data Munger Guru > > What is the problem that you are trying to solve? > Tell me what you want to do, not how you want to do it. > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ R-help@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.