% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/compute.R \name{match_arrow} \alias{match_arrow} \alias{is_in} \title{\code{match} and \code{\%in\%} for Arrow objects} \usage{ match_arrow(x, table, ...) is_in(x, table, ...) } \arguments{ \item{x}{\code{Scalar}, \code{Array} or \code{ChunkedArray}} \item{table}{\code{Scalar}, Array\verb{, }ChunkedArray`, or R vector lookup table.} \item{...}{additional arguments, ignored} } \value{ \code{match_arrow()} returns an \code{int32}-type Arrow object of the same length and type as \code{x} with the (0-based) indexes into \code{table}. \code{is_in()} returns a \code{boolean}-type Arrow object of the same length and type as \code{x} with values indicating per element of \code{x} it it is present in \code{table}. } \description{ \code{base::match()} is not a generic, so we can't just define Arrow methods for it. This function exposes the analogous functions in the Arrow C++ library. } \examples{ \dontshow{if (arrow_available()) (if (getRversion() >= "3.4") withAutoprint else force)(\{ # examplesIf} # note that the returned value is 0-indexed cars_tbl <- arrow_table(name = rownames(mtcars), mtcars) match_arrow(Scalar$create("Mazda RX4 Wag"), cars_tbl$name) is_in(Array$create("Mazda RX4 Wag"), cars_tbl$name) # Although there are multiple matches, you are returned the index of the first # match, as with the base R equivalent match(4, mtcars$cyl) # 1-indexed match_arrow(Scalar$create(4), cars_tbl$cyl) # 0-indexed # If `x` contains multiple values, you are returned the indices of the first # match for each value. match(c(4, 6, 8), mtcars$cyl) match_arrow(Array$create(c(4, 6, 8)), cars_tbl$cyl) # Return type matches type of `x` is_in(c(4, 6, 8), mtcars$cyl) # returns vector is_in(Scalar$create(4), mtcars$cyl) # returns Scalar is_in(Array$create(c(4, 6, 8)), cars_tbl$cyl) # returns Array is_in(ChunkedArray$create(c(4, 6), 8), cars_tbl$cyl) # returns ChunkedArray \dontshow{\}) # examplesIf} }