Janko Thyson
2014-Nov-27 19:26 UTC
[Rd] Feature request: mixing `...` (three dots) with other formal arguments in S4 methods
Hi Gabriel, and thanks for answering. I'm basically just trying to find a way to use the power of `...` in more complex scenarios and I'm well aware that this might not be the best approach ;-) Regarding your actual question: "Are you suggesting methods be dispatched based on the *contents* of ... [...]?" Yes, I guess currently I kind of do - but not on the argument *names* I'm not expecting functions to detect the argument *names* from `...`, but the relevant "argument containers" from which then the actual arguments should be extracted and used: I thought the *actual* arguments to be passed via `...` to subsequent functions/methods could be put into an "arguments container" (as a list so you could easily use them with `do.call(foo)`) that has a class that `foo` expects for its `...` argument (e.g. `ThreedotsForFoo`). What I would like to accomplish is that `foo` auto-detects those parts coming in via `...` that are *relevant* for itself (e.g. instances of the argument container `ThreedotsForFoo`), that it handles them in a proper way (i.e. extracting the *actual* arguments from the container) and that it passes `...` along to subsequently called functions. That's why I would need methods that use mix of regular formal arguments and `...`. Best regards, Janko On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 7:48 PM, Gabriel Becker <gmbecker at ucdavis.edu> wrote:> Janko, > > I'm not entirely sure I understand your proposal. Are you suggesting > methods be dispatched based on the *contents* of ... (ie which arguments > are in there)? This seems like it would be pretty different from how > dispatch behaves now, which is entirely class based. > > Even the dispatching based on ... via dots methods is class based, having > nothing to do AFAIK with the argument names. From ?dotsMethods > > A method selecting on ?...? is specified by a single class in the call to > setMethod <http://127.0.0.1:11942/library/methods/help/setMethod>. If all > the actual arguments corresponding to ?...? have this class, the > corresponding method is selected directly. > > Otherwise, the class of each argument and that class' superclasses are > computed, beginning with the first ?...? argument. For the first argument, > eligible methods are those for any of the classes. For each succeeding > argument that introduces a class not considered previously, the eligible > methods are further restricted to those matching the argument's class or > superclasses. If no further eligible classes exist, the iteration breaks > out and the default method, if any, is selected. > > > No mention of argument name there. > > ~G > > On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 9:45 AM, Janko Thyson <janko.thyson at gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Dear List, >> >> I'm currently investigating if the argument dispatch mechanism based on >> `...` could somehow be "generalized" to scenarios that involve `r` >> recipients located across `c` calling stack layers *and* combined with the >> S4 method mechanism (for those interested see >> >> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/26963900/generalizing-three-dots-argument-dispatch-s4-methods-for-argument-set-i >> for an (conceptual) approach of how this could be realized). >> >> AFAICT, this would require that `...` can be *mixed* with other signature >> arguments, which is currently not supported as stated in `?dotsMethods`: >> >> Quote { >> Using "..." in a Signature >> >> Beginning with version 2.8.0 of R, S4 methods can be dispatched (selected >> and called) corresponding to the special argument ?...?. Currently, ?...? >> cannot be mixed with other formal arguments: either the signature of the >> generic function is ?...? only, or it does not contain ?...?. (This >> restriction may be lifted in a future version.) >> } >> >> Would it be possible to consider lifting this limitation soon? >> >> Thanks a lot to everyone maintaining R!! >> >> Janko >> >> [[alternative HTML version deleted]] >> >> ______________________________________________ >> R-devel at r-project.org mailing list >> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel >> > > > > -- > Gabriel Becker > Graduate Student > Statistics Department > University of California, Davis >[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
Gabriel Becker
2014-Nov-28 01:40 UTC
[Rd] Feature request: mixing `...` (three dots) with other formal arguments in S4 methods
I think I understand what you're saying now, but I'm still kind of missing the benefit from the approach. As far as I can tell just giving foo formals for the arguments you want it to catch gives you the end result you want, doesn't it? And if the generic has ... in it, you can (if you're very careful) add formals to specific methods that would capture arguments not meant for other methods of the same generic. ~G On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 11:26 AM, Janko Thyson <janko.thyson at gmail.com> wrote:> Hi Gabriel, > > and thanks for answering. I'm basically just trying to find a way to use > the power of `...` in more complex scenarios and I'm well aware that this > might not be the best approach ;-) > > Regarding your actual question: > "Are you suggesting methods be dispatched based on the *contents* of ... > [...]?" > Yes, I guess currently I kind of do - but not on the argument *names* > > I'm not expecting functions to detect the argument *names* from `...`, > but the relevant "argument containers" from which then the actual arguments > should be extracted and used: > > I thought the *actual* arguments to be passed via `...` to subsequent > functions/methods could be put into an "arguments container" (as a list so > you could easily use them with `do.call(foo)`) that has a class that `foo` > expects for its `...` argument (e.g. `ThreedotsForFoo`). What I would like > to accomplish is that `foo` auto-detects those parts coming in via `...` > that are *relevant* for itself (e.g. instances of the argument container > `ThreedotsForFoo`), that it handles them in a proper way (i.e. extracting > the *actual* arguments from the container) and that it passes `...` along > to subsequently called functions. > > That's why I would need methods that use mix of regular formal arguments > and `...`. > > Best regards, > Janko > > > On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 7:48 PM, Gabriel Becker <gmbecker at ucdavis.edu> > wrote: > >> Janko, >> >> I'm not entirely sure I understand your proposal. Are you suggesting >> methods be dispatched based on the *contents* of ... (ie which arguments >> are in there)? This seems like it would be pretty different from how >> dispatch behaves now, which is entirely class based. >> >> Even the dispatching based on ... via dots methods is class based, having >> nothing to do AFAIK with the argument names. From ?dotsMethods >> >> A method selecting on ?...? is specified by a single class in the call to >> setMethod <http://127.0.0.1:11942/library/methods/help/setMethod>. If >> all the actual arguments corresponding to ?...? have this class, the >> corresponding method is selected directly. >> >> Otherwise, the class of each argument and that class' superclasses are >> computed, beginning with the first ?...? argument. For the first argument, >> eligible methods are those for any of the classes. For each succeeding >> argument that introduces a class not considered previously, the eligible >> methods are further restricted to those matching the argument's class or >> superclasses. If no further eligible classes exist, the iteration breaks >> out and the default method, if any, is selected. >> >> >> No mention of argument name there. >> >> ~G >> >> On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 9:45 AM, Janko Thyson <janko.thyson at gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >>> Dear List, >>> >>> I'm currently investigating if the argument dispatch mechanism based on >>> `...` could somehow be "generalized" to scenarios that involve `r` >>> recipients located across `c` calling stack layers *and* combined with >>> the >>> S4 method mechanism (for those interested see >>> >>> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/26963900/generalizing-three-dots-argument-dispatch-s4-methods-for-argument-set-i >>> for an (conceptual) approach of how this could be realized). >>> >>> AFAICT, this would require that `...` can be *mixed* with other signature >>> arguments, which is currently not supported as stated in `?dotsMethods`: >>> >>> Quote { >>> Using "..." in a Signature >>> >>> Beginning with version 2.8.0 of R, S4 methods can be dispatched (selected >>> and called) corresponding to the special argument ?...?. Currently, ?...? >>> cannot be mixed with other formal arguments: either the signature of the >>> generic function is ?...? only, or it does not contain ?...?. (This >>> restriction may be lifted in a future version.) >>> } >>> >>> Would it be possible to consider lifting this limitation soon? >>> >>> Thanks a lot to everyone maintaining R!! >>> >>> Janko >>> >>> [[alternative HTML version deleted]] >>> >>> ______________________________________________ >>> R-devel at r-project.org mailing list >>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> Gabriel Becker >> Graduate Student >> Statistics Department >> University of California, Davis >> > >-- Gabriel Becker Graduate Student Statistics Department University of California, Davis [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
Janko Thyson
2014-Nov-28 02:53 UTC
[Rd] Feature request: mixing `...` (three dots) with other formal arguments in S4 methods
Well, the benefit lies in the ability to pass along arguments via `...` to more than one recipient that use *identical argument names* and/or when these recipients are not necessarily located on the same calling stack layer. I'm *not* after a *general* change in the way arguments are dispatched/functions are called as I'm actually a big friend of keepings things quite explicit (thus declaring explicitly what's passed on to subsequent functions by defining respective formal arguments). Nevertheless, sometimes it's quite handy to use `...`. Consider the implementation of `plot()`. It uses `...` quite extensively to pass things along to `par()` which makes perfect sense: declaring formal arguments for things that are merely passed along to `par()` in *all* functions that depend on `par()` would probably be a developer's nightmare w.r.t. refactoring should `par()` ever change. But let's say that at one point in time, developers decide that `par()` can also call something like `parShiny()` if `shiny = TRUE` in order encapsulate shiny-specific graphical parameters in a own function (sorry, I couldn't come up with a better example just now). I'm using a simplified example where `cex` is indeed a formal parameter (which is not the case in the actual `par()`): myPlot <- function(x, ...) { myPar(...) } myPar <- function (cex = 1.0, shiny = FALSE, ...) { if (!shiny) { message("myPar/cex:") print(cex) } else { parShiny(...) } } parShiny <- function (cex = 1.0) { message("parShiny/cex:") print(cex) }> myPlot(x = 10, cex = 1.25)myPar/cex: [1] 1.25> myPlot(x = 10, cex = 1.25, shiny = TRUE)parShiny/cex: [1] 1 So: due to the fact that `myPar()` has a formal argument `cex`, `...` is out of the question for passing along `cex` to `parShiny()`. You'd have to change things to `parShiny(cex = cex)` in the implementation of `myPar()` in order for this to work as expected - which you might or might not feel is (too) cumbersome. While it probably makes a lot of sense to pass things along explicitly in 95 % of cases, there might be situations where you'd prefer to being able to use `...`. But I don't want to overstress the (current) purpose/use case behind my request. I just wondered if the limitation of not being able to mix `...` with other formal arguments could be lifted soon as the possiblity is already stated at `?dotsMethods` :-) On Fri, Nov 28, 2014 at 2:40 AM, Gabriel Becker <gmbecker at ucdavis.edu> wrote:> I think I understand what you're saying now, but I'm still kind of missing > the benefit from the approach. > > As far as I can tell just giving foo formals for the arguments you want it > to catch gives you the end result you want, doesn't it? > > And if the generic has ... in it, you can (if you're very careful) add > formals to specific methods that would capture arguments not meant for > other methods of the same generic. > > ~G > > On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 11:26 AM, Janko Thyson <janko.thyson at gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Hi Gabriel, >> >> and thanks for answering. I'm basically just trying to find a way to use >> the power of `...` in more complex scenarios and I'm well aware that this >> might not be the best approach ;-) >> >> Regarding your actual question: >> "Are you suggesting methods be dispatched based on the *contents* of ... >> [...]?" >> Yes, I guess currently I kind of do - but not on the argument *names* >> >> I'm not expecting functions to detect the argument *names* from `...`, >> but the relevant "argument containers" from which then the actual arguments >> should be extracted and used: >> >> I thought the *actual* arguments to be passed via `...` to subsequent >> functions/methods could be put into an "arguments container" (as a list so >> you could easily use them with `do.call(foo)`) that has a class that `foo` >> expects for its `...` argument (e.g. `ThreedotsForFoo`). What I would like >> to accomplish is that `foo` auto-detects those parts coming in via `...` >> that are *relevant* for itself (e.g. instances of the argument container >> `ThreedotsForFoo`), that it handles them in a proper way (i.e. extracting >> the *actual* arguments from the container) and that it passes `...` along >> to subsequently called functions. >> >> That's why I would need methods that use mix of regular formal arguments >> and `...`. >> >> Best regards, >> Janko >> >> >> On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 7:48 PM, Gabriel Becker <gmbecker at ucdavis.edu> >> wrote: >> >>> Janko, >>> >>> I'm not entirely sure I understand your proposal. Are you suggesting >>> methods be dispatched based on the *contents* of ... (ie which arguments >>> are in there)? This seems like it would be pretty different from how >>> dispatch behaves now, which is entirely class based. >>> >>> Even the dispatching based on ... via dots methods is class based, >>> having nothing to do AFAIK with the argument names. From ?dotsMethods >>> >>> A method selecting on ?...? is specified by a single class in the call >>> to setMethod <http://127.0.0.1:11942/library/methods/help/setMethod>. >>> If all the actual arguments corresponding to ?...? have this class, the >>> corresponding method is selected directly. >>> >>> Otherwise, the class of each argument and that class' superclasses are >>> computed, beginning with the first ?...? argument. For the first argument, >>> eligible methods are those for any of the classes. For each succeeding >>> argument that introduces a class not considered previously, the eligible >>> methods are further restricted to those matching the argument's class or >>> superclasses. If no further eligible classes exist, the iteration breaks >>> out and the default method, if any, is selected. >>> >>> >>> No mention of argument name there. >>> >>> ~G >>> >>> On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 9:45 AM, Janko Thyson <janko.thyson at gmail.com> >>> wrote: >>> >>>> Dear List, >>>> >>>> I'm currently investigating if the argument dispatch mechanism based on >>>> `...` could somehow be "generalized" to scenarios that involve `r` >>>> recipients located across `c` calling stack layers *and* combined with >>>> the >>>> S4 method mechanism (for those interested see >>>> >>>> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/26963900/generalizing-three-dots-argument-dispatch-s4-methods-for-argument-set-i >>>> for an (conceptual) approach of how this could be realized). >>>> >>>> AFAICT, this would require that `...` can be *mixed* with other >>>> signature >>>> arguments, which is currently not supported as stated in `?dotsMethods`: >>>> >>>> Quote { >>>> Using "..." in a Signature >>>> >>>> Beginning with version 2.8.0 of R, S4 methods can be dispatched >>>> (selected >>>> and called) corresponding to the special argument ?...?. Currently, >>>> ?...? >>>> cannot be mixed with other formal arguments: either the signature of the >>>> generic function is ?...? only, or it does not contain ?...?. (This >>>> restriction may be lifted in a future version.) >>>> } >>>> >>>> Would it be possible to consider lifting this limitation soon? >>>> >>>> Thanks a lot to everyone maintaining R!! >>>> >>>> Janko >>>> >>>> [[alternative HTML version deleted]] >>>> >>>> ______________________________________________ >>>> R-devel at r-project.org mailing list >>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel >>>> >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Gabriel Becker >>> Graduate Student >>> Statistics Department >>> University of California, Davis >>> >> >> > > > -- > Gabriel Becker > Graduate Student > Statistics Department > University of California, Davis >[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
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