similar to: Error generated by .Internal(nchar) disappears when debugging

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 7000 matches similar to: "Error generated by .Internal(nchar) disappears when debugging"

2015 Oct 05
9
Error generated by .Internal(nchar) disappears when debugging
On 05/10/2015 7:24 PM, Matt Dowle wrote: > Joris Meys <jorismeys <at> gmail.com> writes: > >> >> Hi all, >> >> I have a puzzling problem related to nchar. In R 3.2.1, the internal > nchar >> gained an extra argument (see >> https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-announce/2015/000586.html) >> >> I've been testing code using the
2015 Oct 06
1
Error generated by .Internal(nchar) disappears when debugging
On 05/10/2015 8:25 PM, Matt Dowle wrote: > > On Mon, Oct 5, 2015 at 4:57 PM, Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.duncan at gmail.com > <mailto:murdoch.duncan at gmail.com>> wrote: > > On 05/10/2015 7:24 PM, Matt Dowle wrote: > > Joris Meys <jorismeys <at> gmail.com <http://gmail.com>> writes: > > > >> > >> Hi all,
2015 Oct 07
1
Error generated by .Internal(nchar) disappears when debugging
Malcolm, I tested the code on a clean R 3.2.0 session. Not even in RStudio, just to rule that out. > sessionInfo() R version 3.2.0 (2015-04-16) Platform: x86_64-w64-mingw32/x64 (64-bit) Running under: Windows 8 x64 (build 9200) locale: [1] LC_COLLATE=English_United Kingdom.1252 [2] LC_CTYPE=English_United Kingdom.1252 [3] LC_MONETARY=English_United Kingdom.1252 [4] LC_NUMERIC=C [5]
2015 Oct 06
1
Error generated by .Internal(nchar) disappears when debugging
On 06/10/2015 8:48 AM, Joris Meys wrote: > > > On Tue, Oct 6, 2015 at 1:57 AM, Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.duncan at gmail.com > <mailto:murdoch.duncan at gmail.com>> wrote: > > On 05/10/2015 7:24 PM, Matt Dowle wrote: > > Joris Meys <jorismeys <at> gmail.com <http://gmail.com>> writes: > > > >> > >>
2015 Oct 06
0
Error generated by .Internal(nchar) disappears when debugging
On Tue, Oct 6, 2015 at 1:57 AM, Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.duncan at gmail.com> wrote: > On 05/10/2015 7:24 PM, Matt Dowle wrote: > > Joris Meys <jorismeys <at> gmail.com> writes: > > > >> > >> Hi all, > >> > >> I have a puzzling problem related to nchar. In R 3.2.1, the internal > > nchar > >> gained an extra
2015 Oct 06
0
Error generated by .Internal(nchar) disappears when debugging
On Mon, Oct 5, 2015 at 4:57 PM, Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.duncan at gmail.com> wrote: > On 05/10/2015 7:24 PM, Matt Dowle wrote: > > Joris Meys <jorismeys <at> gmail.com> writes: > > > >> > >> Hi all, > >> > >> I have a puzzling problem related to nchar. In R 3.2.1, the internal > > nchar > >> gained an extra
2015 Oct 07
0
Error generated by .Internal(nchar) disappears when debugging
What other packages do you have loaded? Perhaps a BioConductor one that loads S4Vectors that announces upon load: Creating a generic function for 'nchar' from package 'base' in package 'S4Vectors' Maybe a red herring... ~Malcolm > -----Original Message----- > From: R-devel [mailto:r-devel-bounces at r-project.org] On Behalf Of Duncan > Murdoch > Sent:
2005 Oct 25
1
performance of nchar
Hi, Is nchar function knowingly slow in R? I'm doing some string formatting that requires multiple call to nchar, and nchar seems to be very slow. Experiment 1, pass nchar inside sprintf, and it takes 0.7 seconds > system.time(for (i in 1:10000) + str = sprintf('0005%020d', nchar(op)) + )[3] [1] 0.7 Experiment 2, get the length of op separately using nchar, and then pass
2009 Aug 24
1
nchar on factors
In R 2.9.1 Windows: > nchar(factor(paste('sdf',1:10))) [1] 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 so it appears that nchar is counting the number of characters in the numeric representation, just like: > nchar(as.numeric(factor(paste('sdf',1:10)))) [1] 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 but ?nchar says explicitly: x: character vector, or a vector to be coerced to a character vector.
2001 Mar 28
2
nchar on data.frames
I don't understand why nchar() gives different string lengths for vectors in a list than it does for vectors in a dataframe. Here's a snippet of code: > temp <- list(text=c("thug","jimbob","apple","thug"),numbers=1:4) > nchar(temp$text) [1] 4 6 5 4 > temp <- data.frame(temp) > nchar(temp$text) [1] 1 1 1 1 Could someone explain
2003 Aug 29
2
length() and nchar()
I would propose to add " See also: `nchar' for counting the number of character in character vectors. " to the helpfile of length(), because it is rather difficult to find nchar() if one has only search terms as "length", "len", "strlen" in mind. Sincerly Wolfram Fischer
2015 Apr 24
2
Development version of R: Improved nchar(), nzchar() but changed API
Those of you who track R development closely, will have noticed yesterday's commit of enhanced versions of nchar() and nzchar(). ------------------------------------------------------------------------ r68254 | maechler | 2015-04-23 18:06:37 +0200 (Thu, 23 Apr 2015) | 1 line Changed paths: M doc/NEWS.Rd M src/library/base/R/New-Internal.R M src/library/base/R/zzz.R M
2010 Dec 21
2
Warning message when items of Hmisc are masked by loading a package.
I've noticed that I get a warning message every time a package masks some functions from Hmisc. The warning message says : Warning message: In identical(get(., i), get(., lib.pos)) : ignoring non-pairlist attributes This happens with eg: library(plyr) library(xtable) I think I've seen this passing by before, but I'm not sure any more. Just thought I'd mention it. Cheers Joris
2010 Jun 18
2
nchar( NA )
Hello, Is this expected ? > nchar( c( "", NA ) ) [1] 0 2 Should not the second one be NA ? Romain -- Romain Francois Professional R Enthusiast +33(0) 6 28 91 30 30 http://romainfrancois.blog.free.fr |- http://bit.ly/98Uf7u : Rcpp 0.8.1 |- http://bit.ly/c6YnCi : graph gallery collage `- http://bit.ly/bZ7ltC : inline 0.3.5
2017 Mar 28
2
`[` not recognized as a primitive in certain cases.
?typeof? is your friend here: > typeof(`[`) [1] "special" > typeof(mc[[1]]) [1] "symbol" > typeof(mc2[[1]]) [1] "special" so mc[[1]] is a symbol, and thus not a primitive. - Lukas > On 28 Mar 2017, at 14:46, Michael Lawrence <lawrence.michael at gene.com> wrote: > > There is a difference between the symbol and the function (primitive >
2010 Mar 30
2
weighted.median function from package R.basic
Dear all, I want to apply a weighted median on a huge dataset, and I remember a function from the package R.basic that could do this using an internal sorting algorithm qsort. This speeded things up quite a bit. Alas, I can't find that package anywhere anymore. There is a weighted.median function in the package limma too, but I didn't use that before. Anybody who knows what happened to
2015 Apr 27
1
Development version of R: Improved nchar(), nzchar() but changed API
Dear Martin, Does the work on nchar mean that bugs #16090 and #16091 will be resolved [1,2]? Thanks, Mark [1] https://bugs.r-project.org/bugzilla3/show_bug.cgi?id=16090 [2] https://bugs.r-project.org/bugzilla3/show_bug.cgi?id=16091 On Sat, Apr 25, 2015 at 11:06 PM, James Cloos <cloos at jhcloos.com> wrote: > >>>>> "GC" == G?bor Cs?rdi <csardi.gabor at
2014 Oct 03
2
How I() works in a formula
Dear all, I'm updating a package regarding a new type of models, and I'm looking to extend the formula interface with two functions (L() and R() ) for construction of these models. I want to use as much of the formula interface as possible, and hoped to do something similarly to I(). I know the I() function does nothing more than add the class "AsIs". I've been browsing the
2012 Aug 27
4
?nchar ?strsplit
Hi, my data frame is x<-data.frame(ID=c("abc/def","abc/def/ghi","abc","mno/pqr/st/ab")) I want to split my column ID using "/" as the place to split. How can I do that without telling the code how many sub-columns. I could use nchar(gsub("[^/]","",x$ID)) to get how many "/" are in each row of the column, but could
2017 Aug 06
1
Help with optim function in R, please?
Hi all, Many thank in advance for helping me.? I tried to fit Expectation Maximization algorithm for mixture data. I must used one of numerical method to maximize my function. I built my code but I do not know how to make the optim function run over a different value of the parameters.? That is, For E-step I need to get the value of mixture weights based on the current (initial) values of