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r - Implementation of skyline query or efficient frontier

I know there must be an easy answer to this but somehow I can't seem to find it...

I have a data frame with 2 numeric columns. I would like to remove from it, the rows, which have the property, that there exists at least one other row in the data frame, with both column values bigger than the ones in this row.

So if I have

    Col1 Col2  
1     2    3  
2     4    7  
3     5    6  

I would like to remove the first row, because the second one fulfills the property and keep only rows 2 and 3.

Thanks a lot!

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That problem is called a "skyline query" by database administrators (they may have other algorithms) and an "efficient frontier" by economists. Plotting the data can make it clear what we are looking for.

n <- 40
d <- data.frame(
  x = rnorm(n),
  y = rnorm(n)
)
# We want the "extreme" points in the following plot
par(mar=c(1,1,1,1))
plot(d, axes=FALSE, xlab="", ylab="")
for(i in 1:n) {
  polygon( c(-10,d$x[i],d$x[i],-10), c(-10,-10,d$y[i],d$y[i]), 
  col=rgb(.9,.9,.9,.2))
}

The algorithm is as follows: sort the points along the first coordinate, keep each observation unless it is worse than the last retained one.

d <- d[ order(d$x, decreasing=TRUE), ]
result <- d[1,]
for(i in seq_len(nrow(d))[-1] ) {
  if( d$y[i] > result$y[nrow(result)] ) {
    result <- rbind(result, d[i,])  # inefficient
  } 
}
points(result, cex=3, pch=15)

Skyline


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