Looks like Sergio Oller took your ambitious approach:
https://github.com/zeehio/ggpipe. It hasn't been updated since 2017, so
there may be some new things in ggplot2 that aren't there yet.
Duncan Murdoch
On 09/12/2020 2:16 p.m., Greg Snow wrote:> Since `+` is already a function we could do regular piping to change this
code:
>
> mtcars %>%
> ggplot(aes(x=wt, y=mpg)) +
> geom_point()
>
> to this:
>
> mtcars %>%
> ggplot(aes(x=wt, y=mpg)) %>%
> `+`(geom_point())
>
> Further we can write wrapper functions like:
>
> p_geom_point <- function(x,...) {
> x + geom_point(...)
> }
>
> The run the code like:
>
> mtcars %>%
> ggplot(aes(x=wt, y=mpg)) %>%
> p_geom_point()
>
> All three of the above give the same plot from what I can see, but I
> have not tested it with very many options beyond the above.
>
> A really ambitious person could create a new package with wrappers for
> all the ggplot2 functions that can come after the plus sign, then we
> could use pipes for everything. I don't know if there are any strange
> circumstances that would make this cause problems (it probably will
> slow things down slightly, but probably not enough for people to
> notice).
>
> On Sun, Dec 6, 2020 at 7:18 PM Avi Gross via R-devel
> <r-devel at r-project.org> wrote:
>>
>> Thanks, Duncan. That answers my question fairly definitively.
>>
>> Although it can be DONE it likely won't be for the reasons Hadley
mentioned until we get some other product that replaces it entirely. There are
some interesting work-arounds mentioned.
>>
>> I was thinking of one that has overhead but might be a pain. Hadley
mentioned a slight variant. The first argument to a function now is expected to
be the data argument. The second might be the mapping. Now if the function is
called with a new first argument that is a ggplot object, it could be possible
to test the type and if it is a ggplot object than slide over carefully any
additional matched arguments that were not explicitly named. Not sure that is at
all easy to do.
>>
>> Alternately, you can ask that when used in such a pipeline that the
user call all other arguments using names like data=whatever,
mapping=aes(whatever) so no other args need to be adjusted by position.
>>
>> But all this is academic and I concede will likely not be done. I can
live with the plus signs.
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.duncan at gmail.com>
>> Sent: Sunday, December 6, 2020 2:50 PM
>> To: Avi Gross <avigross at verizon.net>; 'r-devel'
<r-devel at r-project.org>
>> Subject: Re: [Rd] New pipe operator and gg plotz
>>
>> Hadley's answer (#7 here:
>> https://community.rstudio.com/t/why-cant-ggplot2-use/4372) makes it
pretty clear that he thinks it would have been nice now if he had made that
choice when ggplot2 came out, but it's not worth the effort now to change
it.
>>
>> Duncan Murdoch
>>
>> On 06/12/2020 2:34 p.m., Avi Gross via R-devel wrote:
>>> As someone who switches back and forth between using standard R
methods and those of the tidyverse, depending on the problem, my mood and
whether Jupiter aligns with Saturn in the new age of Aquarius, I have a question
about the forthcoming built-in pipe. Will it motivate anyone to eventually
change or enhance the ggplot functionality to have a version that gets rid of
the odd use of the addition symbol?
>>>
>>> I mean I now sometimes have a pipeline that looks like:
>>>
>>> Data %>%
>>> Do_this %>%
>>> Do_that(whatever) %>%
>>> ggplot(...) +
>>> geom_whatever(...) +
>>> ...
>>>
>>> My understanding is this is a bit of a historical anomaly that
might someday be modified back.
>>>
>>> As I understand it, the call to ggplot() creates a partially
filled-in object that holds all kinds of useful info. The additional calls to
geom_point() and so on will add/change that hidden object. Nothing much happens
till the object is implicitly or explicitly given to print() which switches to
the print function for objects of that type and creates a graph based on the
contents of the object at that time. So, in theory, you could have a pipelined
version of ggplot where the first function accepts something like a data.frame
or tibble as the default first argument and at the end returns the object we
have been describing. All additional functions would then accept such an object
as the (hidden?) first argument and return the modified object. The final
function in the pipe would either have the value captured in a variable for
later use or print implicitly generating a graph.
>>>
>>> So the above silly example might become:
>>>
>>> Data %>%
>>> Do_this %>%
>>> Do_that(whatever) %>%
>>> ggplot(...) %>%
>>> geom_whatever(...) %>%
>>> ...
>>>
>>> Or, am I missing something here?
>>>
>>> The language and extensions such as are now in the tidyverse might
be more streamlined and easier to read when using consistent notation. If we now
build a reasonable version of the pipeline in, might we encourage other uses to
gradually migrate back closer to the mainstream?
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: R-devel <r-devel-bounces at r-project.org> On Behalf Of
Rui
>>> Barradas
>>> Sent: Sunday, December 6, 2020 2:51 AM
>>> To: Gregory Warnes <greg at warnes.net>; Abby Spurdle
>>> <spurdle.a at gmail.com>
>>> Cc: r-devel <r-devel at r-project.org>
>>> Subject: Re: [Rd] New pipe operator
>>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> If Hilbert liked beer, I like "pipe".
>>>
>>> More seriously, a new addition like this one is going to cause
problems yet unknown. But it's a good idea to have a pipe operator
available. As someone used to magrittr's data pipelines, I will play with
this base one before making up my mind. I don't expect its behavior to be
exactly like magrittr "%>%" (and it's not). For the moment all
I can say is that it is something R users are used to and that it now avoids
loading a package.
>>> As for the new way to define anonymous functions, I am less sure.
Too much syntatic sugar? Or am I finding the syntax ugly?
>>>
>>> Hope this helps,
>>>
>>> Rui Barradas
>>>
>>>
>>> ?s 03:22 de 06/12/20, Gregory Warnes escreveu:
>>>> If we?re being mathematically pedantic, the ?pipe? operator is
>>>> actually function composition > That being said, pipes are a
simple
>>>> and well-known idiom. While being less
>>>> than mathematically exact, it seems a reasonable label for
the (very
>>>> useful) behavior.
>>>>
>>>> On Sat, Dec 5, 2020 at 9:43 PM Abby Spurdle <spurdle.a at
gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>> This is a good addition
>>>>>
>>>>> I can't understand why so many people are calling this
a "pipe".
>>>>> Pipes connect processes, via their I/O streams.
>>>>> Arguably, a more general interpretation would include
sockets and files.
>>>>>
>>>>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipeline_(Unix)
>>>>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Named_pipe
>>>>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anonymous_pipe
>>>>>
>>>>> As far as I can tell, the magrittr-like operators are
functions (not
>>>>> pipes), with nonstandard syntax.
>>>>> This is not consistent with R's original design
philosophy, building
>>>>> on C, Lisp and S, along with lots of *important* math and
stats.
>>>>>
>>>>> It's possible that some parties are interested in
creating a kind of
>>>>> "data pipeline".
>>>>> I'm interested in this myself, and I think we could
discuss this more.
>>>>> But I'm not convinced the magrittr-like operators help
to achieve
>>>>> this goal.
>>>>> Which, in my opinion, would require one to model programs
as
>>>>> directed graphs, along with some degree of asynchronous
input.
>>>>>
>>>>> Presumably, these operators will be added to R anyway, and
(almost)
>>>>> no one will listen to me.
>>>>>
>>>>> So, I would like to make one suggestion:
>>>>> Is it possible for these operators to *not* be named:
>>>>> The R Pipe
>>>>> The S Pipe
>>>>> Or anything with a similar meaning.
>>>>>
>>>>> Maybe tidy pipe, or something else that links it to its
proponents?
>>>>>
>>>>> ______________________________________________
>>>>> R-devel at r-project.org mailing list
>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
>>>>>
>>>
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