سؤال

I have a data frame that I'm looking to output to JSON in a particular format, with a small sample below:

raw data

dat <- structure(list(unit = structure(c(1L, 1L, 1L, 1L, 2L, 2L, 2L, 
  2L), .Label = c("A", "B"), class = "factor"), type = structure(c(1L, 
  1L, 1L, 1L, 2L, 2L, 2L, 2L), .Label = c("X", "Y"), class = "factor"), 
  date = structure(c(1357963687, 1357963869, 1357964048, 1357964230, 
  1357963687, 1357963942, 1357963942, 1357964123), class = c("POSIXct", 
  "POSIXt"), tzone = ""), latitude = c(-21.21, -21.22, -21.23, 
  -21.24, -21.23, -21.23, -21.23, -21.23), longitude = c(116.78, 
  116.77, 116.76, 116.75, 116.74, 116.75, 116.75, 116.76)), .Names = c("unit", 
  "type", "date", "latitude", "longitude"), row.names = c(NA, -8L
  ), class = "data.frame")

The JSON format that I'm going to need looks like this:

    [{"unit":"A","type":"X","latitude":[["2013-01-12 12:08:07",-21.21],["2013-01-12 12:11:09",-21.22],["2013-01-12 12:14:08",-21.23],["2013-01-12 12:17:10",-21.24]],
                           "longitude":[["2013-01-12 12:08:07",116.78],["2013-01-12 12:11:09",116.77],["2013-01-12 12:14:08",116.76],["2013-01-12 12:17:10",116.75]]
    },
    {"unit":"B","type":"X", "latitude":[["2013-01-12 12:08:07",-21.23],["2013-01-12 12:12:22",-21.23],["2013-01-12 12:12:22",-21.23],["2013-01-12 12:15:23",-21.23]],
                           "longitude":[["2013-01-12 12:08:07",116.74],["2013-01-12 12:12:22",116.75],["2013-01-12 12:12:22",116.75],["2013-01-12 12:15:23",116.76]]
    }]

I've been so far unable to manipulate the RJSONIO::toJSON function to do anything like that, and I'm not finding the examples in the documentation too helpful.

What do I need to do to get the right output?

Note: There will only ever be a single type for each unit.

PS: Is there a tool out there to make these kinds of things easy? Perhaps something drag and drop?

هل كانت مفيدة؟

المحلول

You can get close by first turning the data frame into a list of lists. For example:

> a=list(unit="A",type="X",latitude=c(1,2,3),longitude=c(4,5,6))
> b=list(unit="B",type="Y",latitude=c(11,22,33),longitude=c(43,54,65))
> dlist = list(a,b)
> cat(toJSON(dlist))
[
 {
 "unit": "A",
"type": "X",
"latitude": [      1,      2,      3 ],
"longitude": [      4,      5,      6 ] 
},
{
 "unit": "B",
"type": "Y",
"latitude": [     11,     22,     33 ],
"longitude": [     43,     54,     65 ] 
} 
]

The problem is really how to manipulate a dataframe into the right format.

However your JSON output has mixed types -character and numeric - in vectors: ["2013-01-12 12:08:07",-21.23] and I don't see how to get that out of R which insists on vectors being a single type. Would ["2013-01-12 12:08:07","-21.23"] be acceptable? If so then read on...

The plyr package has lots of code for splitting and manipulating data frames and lists. For example:

dlply(dat,~unit)

will split the dataframe by the unit variable. You can apply a function to each of these sections and return a list. This function:

make1 <- function(d){   
   list(
         unit=d$unit[1],
         type=d$type[1],
         latitude=cbind(as.character(d$date),d$latitude),
         longitude=cbind(as.character(d$date),d$longitude))
   }

Should convert one section into the right list format. So tell dlply to do that to every section, and return a list of lists. That list has names, which makes toJSON output as a named array - we need to remove the names to get a JS list.

> L = dlply(dat,~unit,make1)
> names(L)=NULL
> cat(toJSON(L))
 [
 {
 "unit": "A",
"type": "X",
"latitude": [ [ "2013-01-12 04:08:07", "-21.21" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:11:09", "-21.22" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:14:08", "-21.23" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:17:10", "-21.24" ] ],
"longitude": [ [ "2013-01-12 04:08:07", "116.78" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:11:09", "116.77" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:14:08", "116.76" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:17:10", "116.75" ] ] 
},
{
 "unit": "B",
"type": "Y",
"latitude": [ [ "2013-01-12 04:08:07", "-21.23" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:12:22", "-21.23" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:12:22", "-21.23" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:15:23", "-21.23" ] ],
"longitude": [ [ "2013-01-12 04:08:07", "116.74" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:12:22", "116.75" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:12:22", "116.75" ],
[ "2013-01-12 04:15:23", "116.76" ] ] 
} 
]

Fun eh?

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