I don't understand why I get the following results. I define two classes
'Base' and 'Derived', the latter of which 'contains' the
first. I then
define a generic method 'test' and overload it for each of these
classes. I
call 'callNextMethod()' in the overload for Derived. From the output, it
appears that the overload for Base gets called twice. Why is this? Test
code follows:
setClass('Base')
setClass('Derived', contains='Base')
setGeneric('test', function(x) standardGeneric('test'))
setMethod('test', signature(x='Base'), function(x)
print('base called'))
setMethod('test', signature(x='Derived'), function(x)
{print('derived
called'); callNextMethod()})
d = new('Derived')
test(d)
Produces the output:
[1] "derived called"
[1] "base called"
[1] "base called"
and I was expecting:
[1] "derived called"
[1] "base called"
Thanx in advance,
Simon Knapp
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
Simon Knapp <sleepingwell at gmail.com> writes:> I don't understand why I get the following results. I define two classes > 'Base' and 'Derived', the latter of which 'contains' the first. I then > define a generic method 'test' and overload it for each of these classes. I > call 'callNextMethod()' in the overload for Derived. From the output, it > appears that the overload for Base gets called twice. Why is this? TestAutoprinting has tricked you.> a <-test(d) # What you expected[1] "derived\ncalled" [1] "base called"> a # what was autoprinted[1] "base called">HTH, Chuck> code follows: > > setClass('Base') > setClass('Derived', contains='Base') > setGeneric('test', function(x) standardGeneric('test')) > setMethod('test', signature(x='Base'), function(x) print('base called')) > setMethod('test', signature(x='Derived'), function(x) {print('derived > called'); callNextMethod()}) > > d = new('Derived') > test(d) > > > Produces the output: > > [1] "derived called" > [1] "base called" > [1] "base called" > > > and I was expecting: > > [1] "derived called" > [1] "base called" > > > Thanx in advance, > Simon Knapp > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] >-- Charles C. Berry Dept of Family/Preventive Medicine cberry at ucsd edu UC San Diego http://famprevmed.ucsd.edu/faculty/cberry/ La Jolla, San Diego 92093-0901
On 11/06/2012 07:03 AM, Simon Knapp wrote:> I don't understand why I get the following results. I define two classes > 'Base' and 'Derived', the latter of which 'contains' the first. I then > define a generic method 'test' and overload it for each of these classes. I > call 'callNextMethod()' in the overload for Derived. From the output, it > appears that the overload for Base gets called twice. Why is this? Test > code follows: > > setClass('Base') > setClass('Derived', contains='Base') > setGeneric('test', function(x) standardGeneric('test')) > setMethod('test', signature(x='Base'), function(x) print('base called')) > setMethod('test', signature(x='Derived'), function(x) {print('derived > called'); callNextMethod()}) > > d = new('Derived') > test(d) > > > Produces the output: > > [1] "derived called" > [1] "base called" > [1] "base called"Fun; I think you're seeing the print command, and also the (normally invisible) return value from print > d = new('Derived') > res = test(d) [1] "derived called" [1] "base called" > res [1] "base called" similar to > print("x") [1] "x" > (print("x")) [1] "x" [1] "x" Martin> > > and I was expecting: > > [1] "derived called" > [1] "base called" > > > Thanx in advance, > Simon Knapp > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > > ______________________________________________ > R-help at r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help > PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >-- Computational Biology / Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center 1100 Fairview Ave. N. PO Box 19024 Seattle, WA 98109 Location: Arnold Building M1 B861 Phone: (206) 667-2793