Grouping age data into 5 year bins
11 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Afficher commentaires plus anciens
Dear MATLAB experts,
I'm trying to create a new column in a table, which contains the age binned into 5 years intervals per row. This column should create the age bins according to another column in the same table, which specifies the age of the individual per row. In order to make what I'm looking for more clear, here a few examples:
If the age of the individual in a certain row were 25.92 (in the age column), the binned age column should display the following value: (25.0, 30.0]
If the age of the individual in a certain row were 42.53 (in the age column), the binned age column should display the following value: (40.0, 45.0]
If the age of the individual in a certain row were 33 (in the age column), the binned age column should display the following value: (30.0, 35.0]
... and so on
Thank you in advance
0 commentaires
Réponse acceptée
DGM
le 12 Mai 2021
Modifié(e) : DGM
le 12 Mai 2021
I'm going to just do this example starting with a numeric vector, but you can adapt it to use your table if you want.
age = rand(10,1)*50+15; % random pretend data
bs = 5;
agebin = ceil(age/bs)*bs;
agebin = [agebin-bs agebin]
agetable = table(age,agebin) % make a table
gives
agetable =
10×2 table
age agebin
______ ________
27.211 25 30
43.016 40 45
63.641 60 65
43.78 40 45
18.965 15 20
51.753 50 55
43.554 40 45
25.962 25 30
34.771 30 35
48.543 45 50
If it's instead desired to have that field as a char/string with the brackets as shown:
age = rand(10,1)*50+15; % random pretend data
bs = 5;
agebin = ceil(age/bs)*bs;
agebin = [agebin-bs agebin]
agebin = sprintfc('(%d %d]',agebin); % reformat it
agetable = table(age,agebin) % make a table
gives
agetable =
10×2 table
age agebin
______ ___________
30.402 {'(30 35]'}
54.001 {'(50 55]'}
17.773 {'(15 20]'}
33.628 {'(30 35]'}
20.063 {'(20 25]'}
24.851 {'(20 25]'}
38.988 {'(35 40]'}
48.377 {'(45 50]'}
18.798 {'(15 20]'}
46.282 {'(45 50]'}
6 commentaires
DGM
le 12 Mai 2021
No worries. There are plenty of code examples around here that make me feel the same way.
Plus de réponses (1)
J. Alex Lee
le 12 Mai 2021
Modifié(e) : J. Alex Lee
le 12 Mai 2021
Interesting, this could be useful for me too! You can use "discretize" to bin the data. Below is a quick and dirty class to implement this idea.
BinEdges = 20:5:45
Data = [25.92;42.53;33;30]
% make sure discretize does what i want
[BData,E] = discretize(Data,BinEdges,"IncludedEdge","right")
LeftEdges = BinEdges(BData)
RightEdges = BinEdges(BData+1)
Using the class below results in:
>> db = DataBins(BinEdges,Data)
db =
"[25,30)"
"[40,45)"
"[30,35)"
"[30,35)"
>> db.IncludedEdge = "right"
db =
"(25,30]"
"(40,45]"
"(30,35]"
"(25,30]"
The class
classdef DataBins < handle & matlab.mixin.CustomDisplay
properties
BinEdges
IncludedEdge
Value
BinIDs
LeftEdges
RightEdges
end
methods
function this = DataBins(BinEdges,Value,IncludedEdge)
arguments
BinEdges (1,:)
Value
IncludedEdge (1,1) string {mustBeMember(IncludedEdge,["left","right"])} = "left"
end
this.BinEdges = BinEdges;
this.Value = Value;
this.IncludedEdge = IncludedEdge;
this.update();
end
function update(this)
try % lazy way to only do when all data are set
V = this.Value(:);
S = size(this.Value);
BIDs = discretize(V,this.BinEdges,"IncludedEdge",this.IncludedEdge);
this.BinIDs = reshape(BIDs,S);
this.LeftEdges = reshape(this.BinEdges(BIDs ),S);
this.RightEdges = reshape(this.BinEdges(BIDs+1),S);
end
end
function set.BinEdges(this,val)
this.BinEdges = val;
this.update();
end
function set.Value(this,val)
this.Value = val;
this.update();
end
function set.IncludedEdge(this,val)
this.IncludedEdge = val;
this.update();
end
end
methods (Access = protected)
function displayScalarObject(this)
switch this.IncludedEdge
case "left"
lb = "[";
rb = ")";
case "right"
lb = "(";
rb = "]";
end
disp(...
compose("%s%d,%d%s",lb,this.LeftEdges,this.RightEdges,rb) ...
);
end
end
end
0 commentaires
Voir également
Catégories
En savoir plus sur Tables dans Help Center et File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!