similar to: Unexpected argument-matching when some are missing

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 11000 matches similar to: "Unexpected argument-matching when some are missing"

2018 Nov 29
3
Unexpected argument-matching when some are missing
On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 10:51 AM S Ellison <S.Ellison at lgcgroup.com> wrote: > > > When trying out some variations with `[.data.frame` I noticed some (to me) > > odd behaviour, > > Not just in 'myfun' ... > > plot(x=1:10, y=) > plot(x=1:10, y=, 10:1) > > In both cases, 'y=' is ignored. In the first, the plot is for y=NULL (so not
2018 Nov 29
0
Unexpected argument-matching when some are missing
On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 5:09 AM Emil Bode <emil.bode at dans.knaw.nl> wrote: > > When trying out some variations with `[.data.frame` I noticed some (to me) odd behaviour, which I found out has nothing to do with `[.data.frame`, but rather with the way arguments are matched, when mixing named/unnamed and missing/non-missing arguments. Consider the following example: > > > >
2018 Nov 29
0
Unexpected argument-matching when some are missing
> When trying out some variations with `[.data.frame` I noticed some (to me) > odd behaviour, Not just in 'myfun' ... plot(x=1:10, y=) plot(x=1:10, y=, 10:1) In both cases, 'y=' is ignored. In the first, the plot is for y=NULL (so not 'missing' y) In the second case, 10:1 is positionally matched to y despite the intervening 'missing' 'y=' So it
2011 Jul 25
1
do.call in "with" construction
Dear all, I'd appreciate any help to rectify what must be a misconception of mine how environments work: ########################## myEnv <- new.env() myEnv$a.env <- 1 myEnv$symbols.env <- "a.env" a.global <- 2 symbols.global <- "a.global" myFun <- function(symbols){do.call("print", lapply(symbols, FUN=as.name))} do.call("myFun",
2018 Nov 21
3
Subsetting row in single column matrix drops names in resulting vector
Hi Rui. Thanks for answer, I'm aware of drop = FALSE option. Unfortunately it doesn't resolve the issue - I'm expecting to get a vector, not a matrix . ??, 21 ????. 2018 ?. ? 20:54, Rui Barradas <ruipbarradas at sapo.pt>: > Hello, > > Use drop = FALSE. > > a[1, , drop = FALSE] > # col1 > #row1 1 > > > Hope this helps, > > Rui Barradas
2020 May 12
4
S3 method dispatch for methods in local environments
Dear All, In R 3.6.3 (and earlier), method dispatch used to work for methods stored in local environments that are attached to the search path. For example: myfun <- function(y) { out <- list(y=y) class(out) <- "myclass" return(out) } print.myclass <- function(x, ...) print(formatC(x$y, format="f", digits=5)) myfun(1:4) # prints: [1]
2008 Jan 28
1
package.skeleton from within function: objects not found
Hi all, I ran into a strange error: I am trying to create a package skeleton for a new source package from within a function. Objects that are created in this function are to be included in my package, but for some reason, I get an error message saying that these objects cannot be found. Here is the code: ###### myfun <- function(pkgName,x){ myenv <- new.env() apply(x, 1,
2018 Sep 14
2
Bug when calling system/system2 (and request for Bugzilla account)
I hope it's not too specific in my setup... I've tried with system2 added on the first line, so: Example.R: system2('ls', timeout=5) cat('Start non-interruptable functions\n') sample_a <- sample(1:1e7) sample_b <- sample(1:2e7) matching <- match(sample_a, sample_b) cat('Finished\n') Sys.sleep(10) And in terminal/bash: R --vanilla
2018 Sep 11
2
Modification-proposal for %% (modulo) when supplied with double
Hi all, Could we modify the "%%" (modulo)-operator to include some tolerance for rounding-errors when supplied with doubles? It's not much work (patch supplied on the bottom), and I don't think it would break anything, only if you were really interested in analysing rounding differences. Any ideas about implementing this and overwriting base::`%%`, or would we want another
2018 Sep 14
3
Bug when calling system/system2 (and request for Bugzilla account)
Hi all, I found some strange behaviour, which I think is a bug. Could someone make an account for me on Bugzilla or pass on my report? The problem: When pressing Ctrl-C when a file is sourced in R, run from Terminal (macOS), sometimes the entire session is ended right away, while I just want to stop the script. This is the case when I press Ctrl-C while some functions are running that don?t
2018 Sep 11
1
Modification-proposal for %% (modulo) when supplied with double
Duncan, I think Emil realizes that the floating point format isn't able to represent certain numbers, that's why he is suggesting this change rather than complaining about our arithmetic being broken. However, I agree with you that we should not adopt his proposal. It would not make things more "user friendly" for people. Everyone has a different application and a different use
2018 Nov 30
2
Unexpected argument-matching when some are missing
But the main point is where arguments are mixed together: > debugonce(plot.default) > plot(x=1:10, y=, 'l') ... Browse[2]> missing(y) [1] FALSE Browse[2]> y [1] "l" Browse[2]> type [1] "p" I think that's what I fall over mostly: that named, empty arguments behave entirely different from omitting them (", ,") And I definitely agree we need
2018 Dec 03
1
Unexpected argument-matching when some are missing
>>>>> Michael Lawrence >>>>> on Fri, 30 Nov 2018 08:24:31 -0800 writes: > Argument matching is by name first, then the still missing > arguments are filled positionally. Unnamed missing > arguments are thus left missing. Does that help? Thank you, Michael! Unfortunately, it may not help sufficiently notably once this thread will be
2006 Jun 02
4
function environment
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hi, how can I automatically access the functions that I loaded into a separate environment? > save(A,B,file="myfun.r") > load("myfun.r",envir=(ENV<-new.env())) > ls(ENV) [1] "A" "B" ?"[" turned up that I can access the functions via > ENV$A function () { } > ENV$A() NULL Now, how
2018 Aug 29
7
ROBUSTNESS: x || y and x && y to give warning/error if length(x) != 1 or length(y) != 1
# Issue 'x || y' performs 'x[1] || y' for length(x) > 1. For instance (here using R 3.5.1), > c(TRUE, TRUE) || FALSE [1] TRUE > c(TRUE, FALSE) || FALSE [1] TRUE > c(TRUE, NA) || FALSE [1] TRUE > c(FALSE, TRUE) || FALSE [1] FALSE This property is symmetric in LHS and RHS (i.e. 'y || x' behaves the same) and it also applies to 'x && y'.
2018 Oct 02
1
Relevel confusing with numeric value
Something that bit me: The function relevel takes a factor, and a reference level to be promoted to the first place. If ?ref? is a character this level is promoted, if it?s a numeric the ?ref?-th level is promoted. Which turns out to be very confusing if you have factor with numeric values (e.g. when reading in a csv with some dirty numeric columns and stringsAsFactors TRUE) For example:
2007 Oct 25
3
Deparsing part of a list argument
Here's a simple example of the type of function I'm trying to write, where the first argument is a list of functions: myfun <- function(funlist, vec){ tmp <- lapply(funlist, function(x)do.call(x, args = list(vec))) names(tmp) <- names(funlist) tmp } > myfun(list("Summation" = sum, prod, "Absolute value" = abs), c(1, 4, 6, 7)) $Summation [1]
2018 Jul 24
2
oddity in transform
The idea is that one wants to write the line of code below in a general way which works the same whether you specify ix as one column or multiple columns but the naming entirely changes when you do this and BOD[, 1] and transform(BOD, X=..., Y=...) or other hard coding solutions still require writing multiple cases. ix <- 1:2 transform(BOD, X = BOD[ix] * seq(6)) On Tue, Jul 24, 2018 at
2018 Jul 23
2
oddity in transform
Note the inconsistency in the names in these two examples. X.Time in the first case and Time.1 in the second case. > transform(BOD, X = BOD[1:2] * seq(6)) Time demand X.Time X.demand 1 1 8.3 1 8.3 2 2 10.3 4 20.6 3 3 19.0 9 57.0 4 4 16.0 16 64.0 5 5 15.6 25 78.0 6 7 19.8 42 118.8 >
2018 Aug 31
3
compairing doubles
Agreed that's it's rounding error, and all.equal would be the way to go. I wouldn't call it a bug, it's simply part of working with floating point numbers, any language has the same issue. And while we're at it, I think the function can be a lot shorter: .is_continous_evenly_spaced <- function(n){ length(n)>1 && isTRUE(all.equal(n[order(n)], seq(from=min(n),