On 8/1/2008 9:46 AM, Benjamin Otto wrote:> Hi,
>
> I would like to convert a simple list into an environment object. It seems
I
> have to create an environment object with new.env() and assign the single
> values afterwards. Now what I did not really understand from the guides
> until now is, how the parent environment supplied to the new.env() function
> influence the final environment. So:
Environments aren't just lists of objects, they also specify where to
look if a particular entry is not found, i.e. they say to look in the
parent.>
> 1. Do I ALWAYS have to supply a parent during creation?
No, you'll get a default one, which is the current evaluation
environment. For example,
> f <- function() {
+ x <- 123
+ return(new.env())
+ }
>
> e <- f()
> e$x
NULL
Using the $ notation does *not* look in the parent.
> get("x", e)
[1] 123
Using get() does, unless
> get("x", e, inherits=FALSE)
Error in get("x", e, inherits = FALSE) : variable "x" was
not found
you say "inherits=FALSE".
Duncan Murdoch
> 2. If yes, what would that be, when all I want is a conversion from a
simple
> list?
>
> Best regards
>
> Benjamin
>
> =====================================> Benjamin Otto
> University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf
> Institute For Clinical Chemistry
> Martinistr. 52
> D-20246 Hamburg
>
> Tel.: +49 40 42803 1908
> Fax.: +49 40 42803 4971
> =====================================>
>
>
>
>
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