FWIW:
1. The best reference i know is the discussion in Venables's and
Ripley's "S Programming" book.
2. VERY BRIEF and INADEQUATE discussion. The general idea is that it
allows one to easily pass down "extra" arguments to the internals of a
function.
For example, suppose that you want to write a function, fitandplot()
that will fit a linear model to data with multiple covariates and then
plot the fitted values versus each of the covariates, but giving the
user the ability to easily change plot options like point color, line
width, etc.. Then instead of having to specify them all (dozens!) in
the top level function as:
fitandplot = function(formula,data, col, lty, pch, cex, etc. etc.)
{
## code
thefit <- lm( formula, data=data)
On Mon, Aug 15, 2011 at 4:47 PM, Carl Witthoft <carl at witthoft.com>
wrote:> I followed a couple threads from the archives and from stackoverflow.com,
> and would like to know: just what is "..." ?? ?What I mean by
this is,for
> example, from the point of view of a user running a function in debug mode,
> ?is "..." an object, or does it exist in the current environment
as some
> thingy?
>
> Maybe a better question to ask is: if I were to write some function that
> accepts "..." for its own personal use, how do I access the
optional
> arguments? ? Do I simply have to do a series of 'match' or
'pmatch' ?on the
> output of list(...) , or is there a more direct way to get at the
variables?
>
> If there is a R programmer's manual that discusses this, I'm happy
to read
> that, so just let me know.
>
> thanks
> Carl
>
> --
> -----
> Sent from my Cray XK6
>
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