| Type: | Package |
| Title: | Extending Base 'R' Lists |
| Version: | 1.0.5 |
| Description: | Extends the functionality of base 'R' lists and provides specialized data structures 'deque', 'set', 'dict', and 'dict.table', the latter to extend the 'data.table' package. |
| Depends: | R (≥ 3.5.0) |
| License: | GPL-3 |
| Encoding: | UTF-8 |
| Imports: | data.table, methods, R6 |
| VignetteBuilder: | knitr |
| Suggests: | knitr, tinytest, rmarkdown, microbenchmark, ggplot2, dplyr, tibble, testthat (≥ 3.0.0) |
| URL: | https://rpahl.github.io/container/, https://github.com/rpahl/container |
| BugReports: | https://github.com/rpahl/container/issues |
| NeedsCompilation: | no |
| Author: | Roman Pahl [aut, cre] |
| Maintainer: | Roman Pahl <roman.pahl@gmail.com> |
| Repository: | CRAN |
| RoxygenNote: | 7.2.1 |
| Config/testthat/edition: | 3 |
| Packaged: | 2024-12-02 14:57:12 UTC; Roman |
| Date/Publication: | 2024-12-02 20:00:02 UTC |
Container Class
Description
This class implements a container data structure with typical
member functions to insert, delete and access elements from the container.
For the standard S3 interface, see container().
Details
This class inherits from class Iterable and serves as the base class for Deque, Set, and Dict.
Super class
container::Iterable -> Container
Methods
Public methods
Inherited methods
Method new()
constructor
Usage
Container$new(...)
Arguments
...initial elements put into the
Container
Returns
the Container object
Method add()
add element
Usage
Container$add(value, name = NULL)
Arguments
valuevalue of
ANYtype to be added to theContainer.namecharacteroptional name attribute of the value.
Returns
the Container object
Method at()
Same as at2 (see below) but accepts a vector of
indices and always returns a Container object.
Usage
Container$at(index)
Arguments
indexvector of indices.
Returns
Container object with the extracted elements.
Method at2()
Extract value at index. If index is invalid or not found, an error is signaled. If given as a string, the element matching the name is returned. If there are two or more identical names, the value of the first match (i.e. leftmost element) is returned.
Usage
Container$at2(index)
Arguments
indexMust be a single number > 0 or a string.
Returns
If given as a number, the element at the corresponding position, and if given as a string, the element at the corresponding name matching the given string is returned.
Method clear()
delete all elements from the Container
Usage
Container$clear()
Returns
the cleared Container object
Method count()
Count number of element occurences.
Usage
Container$count(elem)
Arguments
elemelement to be counted.
Returns
integer number of elem occurences in the Container()
Method delete()
Search for occurence(s) of elem in Container and
remove first one that is found. If elem does not exist, an error
is signaled.
Usage
Container$delete(elem)
Arguments
elemelement to be removed from the
Container.
Returns
the Container object
Method delete_at()
Delete value at given index. If index is not found, an error is signaled.
Usage
Container$delete_at(index)
Arguments
indexcharacterornumericindex
Returns
the Container object
Method discard()
Search for occurence(s) of elem in Container and
remove first one that is found.
Usage
Container$discard(elem)
Arguments
elemelement to be discarded from the
Container. If not found, the operation is ignored and the object is not altered.
Returns
the Container object
Method discard_at()
Discard value at given index. If index is not found, the operation is ignored.
Usage
Container$discard_at(index)
Arguments
indexcharacterornumericindex
Returns
the Container object
Method empty()
This function is deprecated. Use is_empty() instead.
Usage
Container$empty()
Method get_compare_fun()
Get comparison function used internally by the
Container object to compare elements.
Usage
Container$get_compare_fun()
Method has()
Determine if Container has some element.
Usage
Container$has(elem)
Arguments
elemelement to search for
Returns
TRUE if Container contains elem else FALSE
Method has_name()
Determine if Container object contains an element
with the given name. If called with no argument, the function
determines whether any element is named.
Usage
Container$has_name(name)
Arguments
namecharacterthe name
Returns
TRUE if Container has the name otherwise FALSE
Method is_empty()
Check if Container is empty
Usage
Container$is_empty()
Returns
TRUE if the Container is empty else FALSE.
Method length()
Number of elements of the Container.
Usage
Container$length()
Returns
integer length of the Container, that is, the number of
elements it contains.
Method names()
Names of the elements.
Usage
Container$names()
Returns
character the names of the elements contained in x
Method peek_at()
Same as peek_at2 (see below) but accepts a vector of
indices and always returns a Container object.
Usage
Container$peek_at(index, default = NULL)
Arguments
indexvector of indices.
defaultthe default value to return in case the value at
indexis not found.
Returns
Container object with the extracted elements.
Method peek_at2()
Peek at index and extract value. If index is invalid,
missing, or not not found, return default value.
Usage
Container$peek_at2(index, default = NULL)
Arguments
indexnumericorcharacterindex to be accessed.defaultthe default value to return in case the value at
indexis not found.
Returns
the value at the given index or (if not found) the given default value.
Method pop()
Get value at index and remove it from Container.
If index is not found, raise an error.
Usage
Container$pop(index)
Arguments
indexMust be a single number > 0 or a string.
Returns
If given as a number, the element at the corresponding position, and if given as a string, the element at the corresponding name matching the given string is returned.
Method print()
Print object representation
Usage
Container$print(...)
Arguments
...further arguments passed to
format()
Returns
invisibly returns the Container object
Method rename()
Rename a key in the Container. An error is signaled,
if either the old key is not in the Container or the new key results
in a name-clash with an existing key.
Usage
Container$rename(old, new)
Arguments
oldcharactername of key to be renamed.newcharacternew key name.
Returns
the Container object
Method replace()
Replace one element by another element.
Search for occurence of old and, if found, replace it by new.
If old does not exist, an error is signaled, unless add was
set to TRUE, in which case new is added.
Usage
Container$replace(old, new, add = FALSE)
Arguments
oldelement to be replaced
newelement to be put instead of old
addlogicalifTRUEthenewelement is added in caseolddoes not exists.
Returns
the Container object
Method replace_at()
Replace value at given index.
Replace value at index by given value. If index is not found, an
error is signalled, unless add was set to TRUE, in which case
new is added.
Usage
Container$replace_at(index, value, add = FALSE)
Arguments
indexcharacterornumericindexvalueANYnew value to replace the old one.addlogicalifTRUEthe newvalueelement would be added in caseindexdid not exists.
Returns
the Container object
Method remove()
This function is deprecated. Use delete() instead.
Usage
Container$remove(elem)
Arguments
elemelement to be deleted from the
Container. If element is not found in theContainer, an error is signaled.
Returns
the Container object
Method size()
This function is deprecated. Use length() instead.
Usage
Container$size()
Returns
the Container length
Method type()
This function is deprecated and of no real use anymore.
Usage
Container$type()
Returns
type (or mode) of internal vector containing the elements
Method update()
Add elements of other to this if the name is
not in the Container and update elements with existing names.
Usage
Container$update(other)
Arguments
otherIterableobject used to update this.
Returns
returns the Container
Method values()
Get Container values
Usage
Container$values()
Returns
elements of the container as a base list
Method clone()
The objects of this class are cloneable with this method.
Usage
Container$clone(deep = FALSE)
Arguments
deepWhether to make a deep clone.
Author(s)
Roman Pahl
See Also
container(), Iterable, Deque, Set, and Dict
Examples
co = Container$new(1:5, c = Container$new("a", 1), l = list())
co$print()
co$length()
co$names()
co$clear()
# Extract
co = Container$new(a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4)
co$at(1:2)
co$at(c(1, 4))
co$at(list("d", 2))
co$at2(1)
try(co$at(0:2)) # index must be > 0
co$peek_at(0:2)
co$peek_at(0:2, default = 1)
# Replace
co$replace(4, 9)
co$replace(9, 11)
co$replace_at(1, -1)
try(co$replace_at(11, 1)) # index 11 exceeds length of Container
# Delete
co$delete(-1)
co$delete_at(3)
try(co$delete_at(3)) # index 3 exceeds length of Container
co$discard(3)
co2 = Container$new(b = 0)
co2$add(0, name = "a")
co$update(co2)
co$pop(1)
co
Container - Enhancing R's list
Description
A container is a data structure with typical member functions to insert, delete and access elements from the container object. It can be considered as a base R list with extended functionality. The Container class also serves as the base class for Deque, Set, and Dict objects.
Usage
container(...)
cont(...)
as.container(x)
as.cont(x)
is.container(x)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
as.list(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
length(x)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
names(x)
## S3 replacement method for class 'Container'
names(x) <- value
Arguments
... |
(possibly named) elements to be put into or removed from the Container, or additional arguments passed from and to methods. |
x |
|
value |
|
Details
Methods that alter Container objects usually come in two versions
providing either copy or reference semantics where the latter start with
'ref_' to note the reference semantic, for example, add() and ref_add().
-
container(...)initializes and returns a Container object.
-
cont(...)is a short cut forcontainer(...).
-
as.container(x)oras.cont(x)coercexto a Container
-
is.container(x)check ifxis a Container
-
as.list(x)converts containerxto a base R list. All of the container's elements are copied (deeply) during the conversion.
-
length(x)return the number of elements contained inx.
-
names(x)return the names of the elements contained inx.
-
names(x) <- valuesets the names ofx.
-
x + ycombinesxandyinto a new container by appendingytox.
-
x - yelement-wise discards all items ofyfromx, given the element was contained inx. The result is always a container.
-
x == yisTRUEif the contents ofxandyare lexicographically equal.
-
x != yisTRUEif the contents ofxandyare not equal.
-
x < yisTRUEif the contents of x are lexicographically less than the contents of y.
-
x <= yisTRUEif the contents of x are lexicographically less than or equal to the contents of y.
-
add(.x, ...)andref_add(.x, ...)add elements to.x.
-
at(.x, ...,)returns the value at the given indices. Indices can be letters or numbers or both. All indices must exist.
-
at2(x, index)returns the value at the given index or signals an error if not found.
-
clear(x)andref_clear(x)remove all elements fromx.
-
clone(x)create a copy ofx.
-
count(x, elem)count how oftenelemoccurs inx.
-
delete(.x, ...)andref_delete(.x, ...)find and remove elements. If one or more elements don't exist, an error is signaled.
-
delete_at(.x, ...)andref_delete_at(.x, ...)find and remove values at given indices. If any given index is invalid, an error is signaled.
-
discard(.x, ...)andref_discard(.x, ...)find and discard elements. Elements that don't exist, are ignored.
-
discard_at(.x, ...)andref_discard_at(.x, ...)find and discard values at given indices. Invalid indices are ignored.
-
has(x, elem)TRUEif element is inxand otherwiseFALSE.
-
has_name(x, name)check ifnameis inx
-
is_empty(x)TRUEif object is empty otherwiseFALSE
-
peek_at(x, ..., .default = NULL)returns the value at the given indices or (if not found) the given default value.
-
peek_at2(x, index, default)returns the value at the given index or (if not found) the given default value.
-
ref_pop(.x, index)return element at given index and remove it from thecontainerobject.
-
rename(.x, old, new)andref_rename(.x, old, new)rename one or more keys fromoldtonew, respectively, by copy and in place (i.e. by reference).
-
replace(.x, old, new, add = FALSE)andref_replace(.x, old, new, add = FALSE)try to find elementoldand replace it with elementnew. Ifolddoes not exist, an error is raised, unlessaddwas set toTRUE.
-
replace_at(.x, .., .add = FALSE)andref_replace_at(.x, ..., .add = FALSE)replace values at given indices. If a given index is invalid, an error is signaled unless.addwas set toTRUE.
See Also
For the class documentation see Container. Objects of the derived classes can be created by deque, setnew, and dict.
Examples
co = container(1:5, c = container("a", 1), l = list())
is.container(co)
print(co)
length(co)
names(co)
unpack(co) # flatten recursively similar to unlist
# Math
co = container(1, 2, -(3:5))
co
abs(co)
cumsum(co)
round(co)
exp(co)
# Summary
range(co)
min(co)
max(co)
# Arithmetic
c1 = container(1, 1:2)
c2 = container(2, 1:2)
c1 + c2 # same as c(c1, c2)
c2 + c1 # same as c(c2, c1)
c1 - c2
c2 - c1
c1 - c1
# Comparison
c1 = container(1, 2, 3)
c2 = container(1, 3, 2)
c1 == c1 # TRUE
c1 != c2 # TRUE
c1 <= c1 # TRUE
c1 == c2 # FALSE
c1 < c2 # TRUE
c1 < container(2) # TRUE
c1 < container() # FALSE
# Extract or replace
co = container(a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4)
co[1:2]
co[1, 4]
co["d", 2]
co[list("d", 2)]
co[0:10]
co = container(a = 1, b = 2)
co[[1]]
co[["a"]]
co[["x"]]
co = container(a = 1, b = "bar")
(co[1:2] <- 1:2)
try({
co[3] <- 3 # index out of range
})
(co[list(1, "b")] <- 3:4) # mixed numeric/character index
co = container(a = 1, b = 2)
co[[1]] <- 9
co[["b"]] <- 8
co[["x"]] <- 7
co$z <- 99
print(co)
# Replace 8 by 0
co[[{8}]] <- 0
print(co)
co = container(a = 1, b = "bar")
co$f <- 3
co$b <- 2
co
co = container(1)
add(co, 1, b = 2, c = container(1:3))
co = container(a = 1, 2, b = 3, 4)
at(co, 1:3)
at(co, "a", "b", 2)
try(at(co, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(at(co, 1:10)) # index 5 exceeds length of Container
co = container(a = 1, 2, b = 3, 4)
at2(co, 1)
at2(co, "a")
at2(co, 2)
try(at2(co, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(at2(co, 5)) # index 5 exceeds length of Container
co = container(1, 2, mean)
clear(co)
print(co) # Original was not touched
ref_clear(co) # Clears original
print(co)
co = container(1, 2, 3)
co2 = clone(co)
co == co2
co = container("a", "b", "a", mean, mean)
count(co, "a")
count(co, mean)
count(co, "c")
co = container("a", 1:3, iris)
print(co)
delete(co, 1:3, "a")
delete(co, iris)
try({
delete(co, "b") # "b" is not in Container
})
co = container(a = 1, b = 2, 3)
delete_at(co, "a", "b") # [3]
delete_at(co, 1:2) # [3]
delete_at(co, "a", 3) # [b = 2]
try({
delete_at(co, 4) # index out of range
delete_at(co, "x") # names(s) not found: 'x'
})
co = container("a", num = 1:3, data = iris)
print(co)
discard(co, 1:3, "a")
discard(co, iris)
discard(co, "b") # ignored
co = container(a = 1, b = 2, 3)
discard_at(co, "a", "b") # [3]
discard_at(co, 1:2) # [3]
discard_at(co, "a", 3) # [b = 2]
discard_at(co, "x") # ignored
co = container(1, 2, mean)
has(co, 1) # TRUE
has(co, mean) # TRUE
has(co, 1:2) # FALSE
co = container(a = 1, 2, f = mean)
has_name(co, "a") # TRUE
has_name(co, "f") # TRUE
has_name(co, "2") # FALSE
co = container(1, 2)
is_empty(co)
is_empty(clear(co))
co = container(a = 1, 2, b = 3, 4)
peek_at(co, 1)
peek_at(co, "a")
peek_at(co, "x")
peek_at(co, "x", .default = 0)
peek_at(co, "a", "x", 2, 9, .default = -1)
co = container(a = 1, 2, b = 3, 4)
peek_at2(co, 1)
peek_at2(co, "a")
peek_at2(co, "x")
peek_at2(co, "x", default = 0)
co = container(a = 1, b = 1:3, d = "foo")
ref_pop(co, "b")
ref_pop(co, 1)
try({
ref_pop(co, "x") # index 'x' not found
})
co = container(a = 1, b = 2, 3)
rename(co, c("a", "b"), c("a1", "y"))
print(co)
ref_rename(co, c("a", "b"), c("a1", "y"))
print(co)
co = container("x", 9)
replace(co, 9, 0)
replace(co, "x", 0)
try({
replace(co, "z", 0) # old element ("z") is not in Container
})
replace(co, "z", 0, add = TRUE) # ok, adds the element
co = container(a = 0, b = "z")
replace_at(co, a = 1, b = 2)
replace_at(co, 1:2, 1:2) # same
replace_at(co, c("a", "b"), list(1, 2)) # same
try({
replace_at(co, x = 1) # names(s) not found: 'x'
})
replace_at(co, x = 1, .add = TRUE) # ok (adds x = 1)
Deque Class
Description
Deques are a generalization of stacks and queues typically
with methods to add, delete and access elements at both sides of the
underlying data sequence. As such, the Deque can also be used to mimic
both stacks and queues. For the standard S3 interface, see deque().
Details
This class inherits from class Container() and extends it by
popleft and peek methods, and reverse and rotate functionality.
Super classes
container::Iterable -> container::Container -> Deque
Methods
Public methods
Inherited methods
container::Iterable$iter()container::Container$add()container::Container$at()container::Container$at2()container::Container$clear()container::Container$count()container::Container$delete()container::Container$delete_at()container::Container$discard()container::Container$discard_at()container::Container$empty()container::Container$get_compare_fun()container::Container$has()container::Container$has_name()container::Container$initialize()container::Container$is_empty()container::Container$length()container::Container$names()container::Container$peek_at()container::Container$peek_at2()container::Container$pop()container::Container$print()container::Container$remove()container::Container$rename()container::Container$replace()container::Container$replace_at()container::Container$size()container::Container$type()container::Container$update()container::Container$values()
Method addleft()
Add element to left side of the Deque.
Usage
Deque$addleft(value, name = NULL)
Arguments
valuevalue of
ANYtype to be added to theDeque.namecharacteroptional name attribute of the value.
Returns
the Deque object.
Method peek()
Peek at last element of the Deque.
Usage
Deque$peek(default = NULL)
Arguments
defaultreturned default value if
Dequeis empty.
Returns
element 'peeked' on the right
Method peekleft()
Peek at first element of the Deque.
Usage
Deque$peekleft(default = NULL)
Arguments
defaultreturned default value if
Dequeis empty.
Returns
element 'peeked' on the left
Method popleft()
Delete and return element from the left side of the Deque().
Usage
Deque$popleft()
Returns
element 'popped' from the left side of the Deque()
Method rev()
Reverse all elements of the Deque() in-place.
Usage
Deque$rev()
Returns
the Deque() object.
Method rotate()
Rotate all elements n steps to the right. If n is
negative, rotate to the left.
Usage
Deque$rotate(n = 1L)
Arguments
nintegernumber of steps to rotate
Returns
returns the Deque() object.
Method clone()
The objects of this class are cloneable with this method.
Usage
Deque$clone(deep = FALSE)
Arguments
deepWhether to make a deep clone.
See Also
Examples
d = Deque$new(1, 2, s = "a", v = 1:3)
d$addleft(0)
d$peekleft()
d$peek()
d$popleft()
d$rev()
d$rotate()
d$rotate(2)
d$rotate(-3)
Deque - Double-Ended Queue
Description
Deques are a generalization of stacks and queues typically with methods to add, remove and access elements at both sides of the underlying data sequence. As such, the deque can also be used to mimic both stacks and queues.
Usage
deque(...)
as.deque(x)
is.deque(x)
Arguments
... |
initial elements put into the |
x |
|
Details
Methods that alter Deque objects usually come in two versions
providing either copy or reference semantics where the latter start with
'ref_' to note the reference semantic, for example, add() and ref_add().
-
deque(...)initializes and returns an object of classDeque
-
as.deque(x)coercesxto a deque.
-
is.deque(x)returnsTRUEifxis of classDequeandFALSEotherwise.
-
x + ycombinesxandyinto a new deque by appendingytox.
-
x - yelement-wise removes all items ofyfromx, given the element was contained inx.
-
addleft(.x, ...)adds (possibly named) elements to left side of.x. -
ref_addleft(.x, ...)same asaddleft(.x, ...)but adds by reference.
-
peek(x, default = NULL)peek at last element. Ifxis empty, returndefault. -
peekleft(x, default = NULL)peek at first element. Ifxis empty, returndefault.
-
ref_pop(.x)pop last element. If.xis empty, an error is given. -
ref_popleft(.x)pop first element. If.xis empty, an error is given.
-
rev(x)andref_rev(x)reverses all elements being done on a copy or in place, respectively.
-
rotate(x, n)rotate all elementsnsteps to the right, Ifnis negative, rotate to the left.
See Also
See container() for all inherited methods. For the full class
documentation see Deque() and it's superclass Container().
Examples
d = deque(1, 2, s = "a", v = 1:3)
is.deque(d)
print(d)
length(d)
names(d)
as.list(d)
rev(d)
l = list(0, 1)
d2 = as.deque(l)
d + d2
c(d, d2) # same as d + d2
d2 + d
d - d2
c(d2, d) # same as d2 + d
d2 - d
# Math
d = deque(1, 2, -(3:5))
d
abs(d)
cumsum(d)
round(d)
exp(d)
# Summary
range(d)
min(d)
max(d)
d1 = deque(1, 1:2)
d2 = deque(2, 1:2)
d1 + d2 # same as c(d1, d2)
d2 + d1 # same as c(d2, d1)
d1 - d2
d2 - d1
d1 - d1
d = deque(0)
add(d, a = 1, b = 2) # |0, a = 1, b = 2|
addleft(d, a = 1, b = 2) # |b = 2, a = 1, 0|
d = deque(1, 2, 3)
peek(d)
peekleft(d)
peek(deque())
peek(deque(), default = 0)
peekleft(deque(), default = 0)
d = deque(1, 2, 3)
ref_pop(d)
print(d)
ref_popleft(d)
print(d)
try({
ref_pop(deque()) # pop at empty Deque
})
d = deque(a = 1, b = 2, 3)
rev(d)
print(d)
ref_rev(d)
print(d)
d = deque(1, 2, 3, 4)
rotate(d)
rotate(d, n = 2)
Dict Class
Description
The Dict() resembles Python's dict type, and is implemented
as a specialized associative Container().
For the standard S3 interface, see dict().
Details
This class inherits from class Container() and overwrides some
methods to account for the associative key-value pair semantic.
Internally, all key-value pairs are stored in a hash-table and the
elements are always sorted lexicographically by their keys.
Super classes
container::Iterable -> container::Container -> Dict
Methods
Public methods
Inherited methods
container::Iterable$iter()container::Container$at()container::Container$at2()container::Container$clear()container::Container$count()container::Container$delete()container::Container$delete_at()container::Container$discard()container::Container$empty()container::Container$get_compare_fun()container::Container$has()container::Container$has_name()container::Container$is_empty()container::Container$length()container::Container$names()container::Container$peek_at()container::Container$peek_at2()container::Container$pop()container::Container$print()container::Container$rename()container::Container$replace_at()container::Container$size()container::Container$type()
Method new()
Dict constructor
Usage
Dict$new(...)
Arguments
...initial elements put into the
Dict
Returns
returns the Dict
Method add()
If name not yet in Dict, insert value at name,
otherwise signal an error.
Usage
Dict$add(name, value)
Arguments
namecharactervariable name under which to storevalue.valuethe value to be added to the
Dict.
Returns
the Dict object
Method discard_at()
Discard value at given index. If index is not found, the operation is ignored.
Usage
Dict$discard_at(index)
Arguments
indexcharacterornumericindex
Returns
the Dict object
Method get()
This function is deprecated. Use at2() instead.
Usage
Dict$get(key)
Arguments
keycharactername of key.
Returns
If key in Dict, return value at key, else throw error.
Method keys()
Get all keys.
Usage
Dict$keys()
Returns
character vector of all keys.
Method remove()
This function is deprecated. Use delete() instead.
Usage
Dict$remove(key)
Arguments
keycharactername of key.
Returns
If key in Dict, remove it, otherwise raise an error.
Method replace()
Replace one element by another element.
Search for occurence of old and, if found, replace it by new.
If old does not exist, an error is signaled.
Usage
Dict$replace(old, new)
Arguments
oldelement to be replaced
newelement to be put instead of old
Returns
the Dict object
Method set()
This function is deprecated. Use replace() instead.
Usage
Dict$set(key, value, add = FALSE)
Arguments
keycharactername of key.valuethe value to be set
addlogicalifTRUEthe value is set regardless whetherkeyalready exists inDict.
Returns
returns the Dict
Method sort()
Sort elements according to their keys. This function is deprecated as keys are now always sorted.
Usage
Dict$sort(decr = FALSE)
Arguments
decrlogicalifTRUEsort in decreasing order.
Returns
returns the Dict
Method update()
Add elements of other to this if the name is
not in the Dict and update elements with existing names.
Usage
Dict$update(other)
Arguments
otherIterableobject used to update this.
Returns
returns the updated Dict object.
Method values()
Get Container values
Usage
Dict$values()
Returns
a copy of all elements in a list
Method clone()
The objects of this class are cloneable with this method.
Usage
Dict$clone(deep = FALSE)
Arguments
deepWhether to make a deep clone.
See Also
Examples
d = Dict$new(o = "one", na = NA, a = 1)
d
d$keys()
d$add("li", list(1, 2))
d$discard_at("na")
d$replace(1, 9)
d2 = Dict$new(a = 0, b = 1)
d$update(d2)
A Dictionary
Description
The Dict initially was developed to resemble Python's dict type, but by now offers both more features and flexibility, for example, by providing both associative key-value pair as well as positional array semantics. It is implemented as a specialized associative Container thus sharing all Container methods with some of them being adapted to account for the key-value pair semantic. All elements must be named.
Usage
dict(...)
as.dict(x)
is.dict(x)
Arguments
... |
elements put into the |
x |
|
Details
Internally, all key-value pairs are stored in a hash-table and the
elements are sorted lexicographically by their keys.
Methods that alter Dict objects usually come in two versions
providing either copy or reference semantics where the latter start with
'ref_' to note the reference semantic, for example, add() and ref_add().
-
dict(...)initializes and returns an object of classDict
-
as.dict(x)coercesxto a dictionary
-
is.dict(x)returnsTRUEifxis of classDictandFALSEotherwise.
-
x + ycombinesxandyinto a new dict by updatingxbyy(see also[update()]).
-
x - yremoves all keys fromxthat appear iny.
-
x&yreturns a copy ofxkeeping only the keys that are common in both (key intersection), that is, all keys inxthat do not exist inyare removed.
-
x|yreturns a copy ofxextended by all elements ofythat are stored at keys (or names) that do not exist inx, thereby combining the keys of both objects (set union of keys).
-
add(.x, ...)andref_add(.x, ...)addskey = valuepairs to.x. If any of the keys already exists, an error is given.
-
replace(.x, old, new)andref_replace(.x, old)try to find elementoldand replace it with elementnew. Ifolddoes not exist, an error is raised.
-
update(object, other)andref_update(object, other)adds elements ofotherdict for keys not yet inobjectand replaces the values of existing keys.
See Also
See container() for all inherited methods. For the full class
documentation see Dict and it's superclass Container.
Examples
d = dict(b = "one", a = 1, f = mean, na = NA)
print(d)
names(d)
try(dict(a = 1, 2)) # all elements must be named
# Coercion
as.dict(list(A = 1:3, B = "b"))
as.dict(c(x = 1, y = "x", z = 2 + 3))
# Math
d = dict(a = rnorm(1), b = rnorm(1))
abs(d)
cumsum(d)
round(d)
exp(d)
# Summary
range(d)
min(d)
max(d)
d1 = dict(a = 1, b = list(1, 2))
d2 = dict(a = 2, b = list(1, 2))
d1 + d2 # same as update(d, d2)
d2 + d1 # same as update(d2, d)
try({
c(d1, d2) # duplicated keys are not allowed for Dict
})
d1 - d2
d2 - d1
d1 - d1
d1 = dict(a = 1, b = 2)
d2 = dict(a = 10, x = 4)
d1 & d2 # {a = 1}
d1 | d2 # {a = 1, b = 2, x = 4}
d = dict(a = 1)
add(d, b = 2, co = container(1:3))
try(add(d, a = 7:9)) # key 'a' already in Dict
d = dict(a = 1, b = "z")
replace(d, 1, 1:5)
replace(d, "z", "a")
try({
replace(d, "a", 2) # old element ("a") is not in Dict
})
d1 = dict(a = 1, b = 2)
d2 = dict( b = 0, c = 3)
update(d1, d2) # {a = 1, b = 0, c = 3}
update(d2, d1) # {a = 1, b = 2, c = 3}
Iterable abstract class interface
Description
An Iterable is an object that provides an iter() method,
which is expected to return an Iterator object. This class defines the
abstract class interface such that each class inheriting this class provides
an iter() method and must implement a private method create_iter(),
which must return an Iterator object.
Methods
Public methods
Method new()
Iterable is an abstract class and thus cannot be instantiated.
Usage
Iterable$new()
Method iter()
Create iterator
Usage
Iterable$iter()
Returns
returns the Iterator object.
Method clone()
The objects of this class are cloneable with this method.
Usage
Iterable$clone(deep = FALSE)
Arguments
deepWhether to make a deep clone.
Author(s)
Roman Pahl
See Also
Iterator Class
Description
An Iterator is an object that allows to iterate over
sequences. It implements next_iter and get_value to iterate and retrieve the
value of the sequence it is associated with.
For the standard S3 interface, see iter().
Methods
Public methods
Method new()
Iterator constructor
Usage
Iterator$new(x, .subset = .subset2)
Arguments
xobject to iterate over
.subsetaccessor function
Returns
invisibly returns the Iterator object
Method begin()
set iterator to the first element of the underlying sequence unless length of sequence is zero, in which case it will point to nothing.
Usage
Iterator$begin()
Returns
invisibly returns the Iterator object
Method get_value()
get value where the iterator points to
Usage
Iterator$get_value()
Returns
returns the value the Iterator is pointing at.
Method get_next()
get next value
Usage
Iterator$get_next()
Returns
increments the iterator and returns the value the Iterator
is pointing to.
Method has_next()
check if iterator has more elements
Usage
Iterator$has_next()
Returns
TRUE if iterator has next element else FALSE
Method has_value()
check if iterator points at value
Usage
Iterator$has_value()
Returns
TRUE if iterator points at value otherwise FALSE
Method length()
iterator length
Usage
Iterator$length()
Returns
number of elements to iterate
Method pos()
get iterator position
Usage
Iterator$pos()
Returns
integer if iterator has next element else FALSE
Method next_iter()
increment iterator
Usage
Iterator$next_iter()
Returns
invisibly returns the Iterator object
Method print()
print method
Usage
Iterator$print()
Method reset_iter()
reset iterator to '0'
Usage
Iterator$reset_iter()
Returns
invisibly returns the Iterator object
Method clone()
The objects of this class are cloneable with this method.
Usage
Iterator$clone(deep = FALSE)
Arguments
deepWhether to make a deep clone.
Author(s)
Roman Pahl
Examples
# Numeric Vector
v = 1:3
it = Iterator$new(v)
it
try(it$get_value()) # iterator does not point at a value
it$has_value()
it$has_next()
it$next_iter()
it$get_value()
it$get_next()
it$get_next()
it
it$has_next()
it$begin()
it$get_value()
it$reset_iter()
# Works by reference for Container
co = Container$new(1, 2, 3)
it = co$iter()
it$get_next()
co$discard(2)
it
it$get_value()
co$discard(1)
it
it$get_value()
it$begin()
Arithmetic Operators
Description
Binary arithmetic operators for Container() objects and
derived classes.
Usage
## S3 method for class 'Container'
x + y
## S3 method for class 'Container'
x - y
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
x + y
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
x - y
## S3 method for class 'Dict'
x + y
## S3 method for class 'Dict'
x - y
## S3 method for class 'Set'
x + y
## S3 method for class 'Set'
x - y
Arguments
x, y |
Depending on the operator at least one must be of class
|
Value
For Container, x + y combines x and y into a new container
by appending y to x.
For Container, x - y element-wise discards all items of y
from x, given the element was contained in x. The result is always a
container.
For Deque, x + y combines x and y into a new deque by
appending y to x.
For Deque, x - y element-wise removes all items of y from x,
given the element was contained in x.
For Dict, x + y combines x and y into a new dict by
updating x by y (see also [update()]).
For Dict, x - y removes all keys from x that appear in y.
For Set, x + y performs the set union.
For Set, x - y performs the set difference.
Examples
c1 = container(1, 1:2)
c2 = container(2, 1:2)
c1 + c2 # same as c(c1, c2)
c2 + c1 # same as c(c2, c1)
c1 - c2
c2 - c1
c1 - c1
# Arithmetic
d1 = deque(1, 1:2)
d2 = deque(2, 1:2)
d1 + d2 # same as c(d1, d2)
d2 + d1 # same as c(d2, d1)
d1 - d2
d2 - d1
d1 - d1
# Arithmetic
d1 = dict(a = 1, b = list(1, 2))
d2 = dict(a = 2, b = list(1, 2))
d1 + d2 # same as update(d, d2)
d2 + d1 # same as update(d2, d)
try({
c(d1, d2) # duplicated keys are not allowed for Dict
})
d1 - d2
d2 - d1
d1 - d1
# Arithmetic
s1 = setnew(1, 1:2)
s2 = setnew(2, 1:2)
s1 + s2 # same as s1 | s2 or c(c1, s2)
s2 + s1 # same
s1 - s2
s2 - s1
Comparison Operators
Description
Binary comparison operators for Container() objects and
derived classes.
Usage
## S3 method for class 'Container'
x == y
## S3 method for class 'Container'
x != y
## S3 method for class 'Container'
x < y
## S3 method for class 'Container'
x > y
## S3 method for class 'Container'
x <= y
## S3 method for class 'Container'
x >= y
Arguments
x, y |
at least one must be a |
Details
-
x == yisTRUEif the contents ofxandyare lexicographically equal. -
x != yisTRUEif the contents ofxandyare not equal. -
x < yisTRUEif the contents of x are lexicographically less than the contents of y. -
x <= yisTRUEif the contents of x are lexicographically less than or equal to the contents of y.
Examples
c1 = container(1, 2, 3)
c2 = container(1, 3, 2)
c1 == c1 # TRUE
c1 != c2 # TRUE
c1 <= c1 # TRUE
c1 == c2 # FALSE
c1 < c2 # TRUE
c1 < container(2) # TRUE
c1 < container() # FALSE
Extract Parts of a Container Object
Description
Extract parts of a Container object similar
to R's base extract operators on lists.
Usage
## S3 method for class 'Container'
x[...]
## S3 method for class 'Container'
x[[i]]
Arguments
x |
|
i, ... |
indices specifying elements to extract. Indices
are |
Details
[ selects multiple values. The indices can be numeric or
character or both. They can be passed as a vector or list or,
for convenience, just as a comma-separated sequence (see Examples).
Non-existing indices are ignored.
[[ selects a single value using a numeric or character index.
Examples
co = container(a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4)
co[1:2]
co[1, 4]
co["d", 2]
co[list("d", 2)]
co[0:10]
co = container(a = 1, b = 2)
co[[1]]
co[["a"]]
co[["x"]]
Logic Operators
Description
Binary logic operators for Container() objects and
derived classes.
Usage
## S3 method for class 'Dict'
x & y
## S3 method for class 'Dict'
x | y
## S3 method for class 'Set'
x & y
## S3 method for class 'Set'
x | y
Arguments
x, y |
Depending on the operator at least one must be of class
|
Examples
d1 = dict(a = 1, b = 2)
d2 = dict(a = 10, x = 4)
d1 & d2 # {a = 1}
Replace Parts of a Container
Description
Replace parts of a Container object similar
to R's base replace operators on lists.
Usage
## S3 replacement method for class 'Container'
x[i] <- value
## S3 replacement method for class 'Container'
x[[i]] <- value
## S3 replacement method for class 'Container'
x$name <- value
Arguments
x |
|
i |
indices specifying elements to replace. Indices
are |
value |
the replacing value of |
name |
|
Details
[<- replaces multiple values. The indices can be numeric or
character or both. They can be passed as a vector or list. Values can
be added by 'replacing' at new indices, which only works for character
indices.
[[<- replaces a single value at a given numeric or character index.
Instead of an index, it is also possible to replace certain elements by
passing the element in curly braces (see Examples), that is, the object is
searched for the element and then the element is replaced by the value.
$<- replaces a single element at a given name.
Examples
co = container(a = 1, b = "bar")
(co[1:2] <- 1:2)
try({
co[3] <- 3 # index out of range
})
(co[list(1, "b")] <- 3:4) # mixed numeric/character index
co = container(a = 1, b = 2)
co[[1]] <- 9
co[["b"]] <- 8
co[["x"]] <- 7
co$z <- 99
print(co)
# Replace 8 by 0
co[[{8}]] <- 0
print(co)
co = container(a = 1, b = "bar")
co$f <- 3
co$b <- 2
co
OrderedSet Class
Description
The OrderedSet is a Set where all elements are always ordered.
Details
The order of elements is determined sequentially as follows:
element's length
whether it is an atomic element
the element's class(es)
by numeric value (if applicable)
it's representation when printed
the name of the element in the Set
Super classes
container::Iterable -> container::Container -> container::Set -> OrderedSet
Methods
Public methods
Inherited methods
container::Iterable$iter()container::Container$at()container::Container$at2()container::Container$clear()container::Container$count()container::Container$delete()container::Container$delete_at()container::Container$discard()container::Container$discard_at()container::Container$empty()container::Container$get_compare_fun()container::Container$has()container::Container$has_name()container::Container$is_empty()container::Container$length()container::Container$names()container::Container$peek_at()container::Container$peek_at2()container::Container$pop()container::Container$print()container::Container$remove()container::Container$rename()container::Container$replace()container::Container$replace_at()container::Container$size()container::Container$type()container::Container$update()container::Set$diff()container::Set$intersect()container::Set$is_equal()container::Set$is_proper_subset()container::Set$is_subset()container::Set$union()container::Set$values()
Method new()
OrderedSet constructor
Usage
OrderedSet$new(...)
Arguments
...initial elements put into the
OrderedSet
Returns
returns the OrderedSet object
Method add()
Add element
Usage
OrderedSet$add(value, name = NULL)
Arguments
valuevalue of
ANYtype to be added to theOrderedSet.namecharacteroptional name attribute of the value.
Returns
the OrderedSet object.
Method clone()
The objects of this class are cloneable with this method.
Usage
OrderedSet$clone(deep = FALSE)
Arguments
deepWhether to make a deep clone.
See Also
Examples
s1 = OrderedSet$new(2, 1)
s1
Set Class
Description
The Set is considered and implemented as a specialized
Container, that is, elements are always unique in the Container and
it provides typical set operations such as union and intersect.
For the standard S3 interface, see setnew().
Super classes
container::Iterable -> container::Container -> Set
Methods
Public methods
Inherited methods
container::Iterable$iter()container::Container$at()container::Container$at2()container::Container$clear()container::Container$count()container::Container$delete()container::Container$delete_at()container::Container$discard()container::Container$discard_at()container::Container$empty()container::Container$get_compare_fun()container::Container$has()container::Container$has_name()container::Container$is_empty()container::Container$length()container::Container$names()container::Container$peek_at()container::Container$peek_at2()container::Container$pop()container::Container$print()container::Container$remove()container::Container$rename()container::Container$replace()container::Container$replace_at()container::Container$size()container::Container$type()container::Container$update()
Method new()
Set constructor
Usage
Set$new(...)
Arguments
...initial elements put into the
Set
Returns
returns the Set object
Method add()
Add element
Usage
Set$add(value, name = NULL)
Arguments
valuevalue of
ANYtype to be added to theSet.namecharacteroptional name attribute of the value.
Returns
the Set object.
Method diff()
Set difference
Usage
Set$diff(s)
Arguments
sSetobject to 'subtract'
Returns
the Set object updated as a result of the set difference
between this and s.
Method intersect()
Set intersection
Usage
Set$intersect(s)
Arguments
sSetobject to 'intersect'
Returns
the Set object as a result of the intersection of this and s.
Method union()
Set union
Usage
Set$union(s)
Arguments
sSetobject to be 'unified'
Returns
the Set object as a result of the union of this and s.
Method is_equal()
Set equality
Usage
Set$is_equal(s)
Arguments
sSetobject to compare against
Returns
TRUE if this is equal to s, otherwise FALSE
Method is_subset()
Set proper subset
Usage
Set$is_subset(s)
Arguments
sSetobject to compare against
Returns
TRUE if this is subset of s, otherwise FALSE
Method is_proper_subset()
Set subset
Usage
Set$is_proper_subset(s)
Arguments
sSetobject to compare against
Returns
TRUE if this is proper subset of s, otherwise FALSE
Method values()
Get Set values
Usage
Set$values()
Returns
elements of the set as a base list
Method clone()
The objects of this class are cloneable with this method.
Usage
Set$clone(deep = FALSE)
Arguments
deepWhether to make a deep clone.
See Also
Examples
s1 = Set$new(1, 2)
s1
s1$add(1)
s1$add(3)
s2 = Set$new(3, 4, 5)
s1$union(s2)
s1
s1 = Set$new(1, 2, 3)
s1$intersect(s2)
s1
s1$diff(s2)
s1$diff(s1)
s1
Set and ordered Set
Description
The Set is considered and implemented as a specialized
Container, that is, Set elements are always unique. It provides
typical set operations such as union and intersect.
Usage
setnew(..., .ordered = FALSE)
as.set(x)
as.orderedset(x)
is.set(x)
is.orderedset(x)
Arguments
... |
initial elements put into the |
.ordered |
|
x |
|
Details
Methods that alter Set objects usually come in two versions
providing either copy or reference semantics where the latter start with
'ref_' to note the reference semantic, for example, add() and ref_add().
-
setnew(...)initializes and returns aSet()object.
-
as.set(x)coercesxto a set.
-
as.orderedset(x)coercesxto an ordered set.
-
is.set(x)returnsTRUEifxis of classSetandFALSEotherwise.
-
is.orderedset(x)returnsTRUEifxis of classOrderedSetandFALSEotherwise.
-
x&yperforms the set intersection of x and y
-
x|yperforms the set union of x and y
See Also
See container() for all inherited methods. For the full class
documentation see Set and it's superclass Container.
Examples
s = setnew(1, b = NA, 1:3, c = container("a", 1))
is.set(s)
print(s)
length(s)
names(s)
as.list(s)
unpack(s) # flatten recursively similar to unlist
so = setnew(2, 1, .ordered = TRUE)
print(so)
add(so, 0)
# Math
s = setnew(5:3, 1, 2)
s
abs(s)
cumsum(s)
round(s)
exp(s)
# Summary
range(s)
min(s)
max(s)
s1 = setnew(1, 1:2)
s2 = setnew(2, 1:2)
s1 + s2 # same as s1 | s2 or c(c1, s2)
s2 + s1 # same
s1 - s2
s2 - s1
s1 = setnew(1, b = 2)
s2 = setnew(1, b = 4)
s1 & s2 # {1}
s1 | s2 # {1, b = 2, b = 4}
Add Elements to Containers
Description
Add elements to container-like objects.
Usage
add(.x, ...)
ref_add(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
add(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
ref_add(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Dict'
add(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Dict'
ref_add(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
add(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
ref_add(.x, ...)
Arguments
.x |
an |
... |
elements to be added. |
Value
For Container, an object of class Container (or one of the respective derived classes).
For dict.table an object of class dict.table.
Note
While add uses copy semantics ref_add works by reference.
If .x is a Container, Set or Deque object, the elements being added
can (but must not) be named.
If .x is a Dict or dict.table object,
all elements must be of the form key = value.
If one of the keys already exists, an error is given.
Examples
co = container(1)
add(co, 1, b = 2, c = container(1:3))
s = setnew(1)
add(s, 1, 1, b = 2, "1", co = container(1, 1))
d = dict(a = 1)
add(d, b = 2, co = container(1:3))
try(add(d, a = 7:9)) # key 'a' already in Dict
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3)
add(dit, b = 3:1, d = 4:6)
try(add(dit, a = 7:9)) # column 'a' already exists
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3)
add(dit, b = 3:1, d = 4:6)
try(add(dit, a = 7:9)) # column 'a' already exists
Add Elements to the Left of Deques
Description
Add elements to left side of Deque objects.
Usage
addleft(.x, ...)
ref_addleft(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
addleft(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
ref_addleft(.x, ...)
Arguments
.x |
a |
... |
elements to be added. |
Value
For Deque, an object of class Deque with the elements being
added to the left of .x.
Note
While addleft uses copy semantics ref_addleft work by reference.
Examples
d = deque(0)
add(d, a = 1, b = 2) # |0, a = 1, b = 2|
addleft(d, a = 1, b = 2) # |b = 2, a = 1, 0|
Extract Elements Safely
Description
Extract parts of a Container at given indices. If an index is invalid, an error is signaled. If given as a string, the element matching the name is returned. If there are two or more identical names, the value of the first match (i.e. leftmost element) is returned. Indices can be letters or numbers, or both at the same time.
Usage
at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
at(.x, ...)
Arguments
.x |
an |
... |
indices of elements to be extracted |
Value
For Container, returns the values at the given indidces.
For dict.table, returns the columns at the given indices.
See Also
peek_at() for less strict extraction
Examples
# Container
co = container(a = 1, 2, b = 3, 4)
at(co, 1:3)
at(co, "a", "b", 2)
try(at(co, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(at(co, 1:10)) # index 5 exceeds length of Container
# Dict
d = dict(a = 1, b = 3)
at(d, 1:2)
at(d, "a", 2)
try(at(d, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(at(d, 1:3)) # index 5 exceeds length of Dict
# dict.table
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
at(dit, "a")
at(dit, 2)
at(dit, "a", 2)
try(at(dit, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(at(dit, 1:3)) # index 3 exceeds length of dict.table
Extract Single Elements Safely
Description
Extracts the value of a Container at the given index. If the index is invalid, an error is signaled. If given as a string, the element matching the name is returned. If there are two or more identical names, the value of the first match (i.e. leftmost element) is returned. Extract value at index. If index is invalid or not found, an error is signaled. If given as a string, the element matching the name is returned. If there are two or more identical names, the value of the first match (i.e. leftmost element) is returned.
Usage
at2(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
at2(x, index, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
at2(x, index, ...)
Arguments
x |
an |
... |
other arguments passed to or from methods. |
index |
|
Value
For Container, returns the value at the given index.
For dict.table, returns the column at the given index or signals
an error if not found.
See Also
peek_at2() for less strict extraction
Examples
# Container
co = container(a = 1, 2, b = 3, 4)
at2(co, 1)
at2(co, "a")
at2(co, 2)
try(at2(co, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(at2(co, 5)) # index 5 exceeds length of Container
# Dict
d = dict(a = 1, b = 3)
at2(d, 1)
at2(d, "a")
at2(d, 2)
try(at2(d, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(at2(d, 5)) # index 5 exceeds length of Dict
# dict.table
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
at2(dit, 1)
at2(dit, "a")
at2(dit, 2)
try(at2(dit, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(at2(dit, 5)) # index 5 exceeds length of dict.table
Clear a Container
Description
Removes all elements from the container object.
Usage
clear(x)
ref_clear(x)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
clear(x)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
ref_clear(x)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
clear(x)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
ref_clear(x)
Arguments
x |
any |
Value
For Container, an object of class Container (or one of the respective derived classes).
For dict.table an object of class dict.table.
Examples
co = container(1, 2, mean)
clear(co)
co
ref_clear(co)
co
dit = dict.table(a = 1, b = 2)
clear(dit)
dit # original was not touched
ref_clear(dit)
dit # original was cleared
Clone an Object
Description
Creates a copy of the object.
Usage
clone(x)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
clone(x)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
clone(x)
Arguments
x |
any |
Value
A copy of the object.
Examples
co = container(1, 2, 3)
co2 = clone(co)
co == co2
d = dict.table(a = 1:2, b = 3:4)
d2 = clone(d)
ref_clear(d)
print(d2)
Set Container Package Options
Description
Set Container Package Options
Usage
container_options(..., .reset = FALSE)
getContainerOption(x, default = NULL)
Arguments
... |
any options can be defined, using name = value. |
.reset |
|
x |
a character string holding an option name. |
default |
if the specified option is not set in the options list, this value is returned. |
Value
-
container_options()returns a list of all set options sorted by name. -
container_options(name), a list of length one containing the set value, orNULLif it is unset. Can also be multiple names (see Examples). -
container_options(key = value)sets the option with namekeytovalueand returns the previous options invisibly.
Container Options
-
compare(default =all.equal) -
useDots(default =TRUE) whether to abbreviate long container elements with...when exceedingvec.len(see below). IfFALSE, they are abbreviated as<<type(length)>>. -
vec.len(default = 4) the length limit at which container vectors are abbreviated.
Examples
co = container(1L, 1:10, as.list(1:5))
co
container_options(useDots = FALSE)
co
container_options(useDots = TRUE, vec.len = 6)
co
has(co, 1.0)
container_options(compare = "identical")
has(co, 1.0) # still uses 'all.equal'
co2 = container(1L)
has(co2, 1.0)
has(co2, 1L)
container_options()
container_options(.reset = TRUE)
Count Elements
Description
Count the number of occurences of some element.
Usage
count(x, elem)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
count(x, elem)
## S3 method for class 'Set'
count(x, elem)
Arguments
x |
any |
elem |
element to counted. |
Value
integer number of how many times elem occurs in the object.
Examples
co = container("a", "b", "a", mean, mean)
count(co, "a")
count(co, mean)
count(co, "c")
Delete Container Elements Safely
Description
Search and remove elements from an object. If the element is not found, an error is signaled.
Usage
delete(.x, ...)
ref_delete(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
delete(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
ref_delete(.x, ...)
Arguments
.x |
any |
... |
elements to be deleted. |
Value
For Container, an object of class Container (or one of the
respective derived classes).
Examples
s = setnew("a", 1:3, iris)
print(s)
delete(s, 1:3, "a")
delete(s, iris)
try({
delete(s, "b") # "b" is not in Set
})
Delete Elements at Indices Safely
Description
Search and remove values at given indices, which can be numeric or character or both. If any given index is invalid, an error is signaled. Indices can be numbers or names or both.
Usage
delete_at(.x, ...)
ref_delete_at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
delete_at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
ref_delete_at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
delete_at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
ref_delete_at(.x, ...)
Arguments
.x |
any |
... |
indices at which values are to be deleted. |
Value
For Container, an object of class Container (or one of the
respective derived classes).
For dict.table, an object of class dict.table.
Examples
co = container(a = 1, b = 2, 3)
delete_at(co, "a", "b") # [3]
delete_at(co, 1:2) # [3]
delete_at(co, "a", 3) # [b = 2]
try({
delete_at(co, 4) # index out of range
delete_at(co, "x") # names(s) not found: 'x'
})
dit = as.dict.table(head(sleep))
dit
delete_at(dit, "ID")
delete_at(dit, "ID", 1)
try({
delete_at(dit, "foo") # Column 'foo' not in dict.table
})
Deprecated Functions
Description
These functions are provided for backwards-compatibility and may be defunct as soon as the next release.
Usage
empty(x)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
empty(x)
size(x)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
size(x)
sortkey(x, decr = FALSE)
## S3 method for class 'Dict'
sortkey(x, decr = FALSE)
values(x)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
values(x)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
values(x)
keys(x)
Arguments
x |
any |
decr |
|
Details
-
empty()is_empty()instead -
set()setnew()instead -
type()not of use anymore
Combining Dict and data.table
Description
The dict.table is a combination of dict and data.table and basically can be considered a data.table with unique column names and an extended set of functions to add, extract and remove data columns with the goal to further facilitate code development using data.table. A dict.table object provides all dict and data.table functions and operators at the same time.
Usage
dict.table(...)
as.dict.table(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'data.table'
as.dict.table(x, copy = TRUE, ...)
is.dict.table(x)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
rbind(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
cbind(x, ...)
Arguments
... |
elements put into the dict.table and/or additional arguments to be passed on. |
x |
any |
copy |
if |
Details
Methods that alter dict.table objects usually come in two versions
providing either copy or reference semantics where the latter start with
'ref_' to note the reference semantic, for example, add() and ref_add().
-
dict.table(...)initializes and returns a dict object.
-
as.dict.table(x, ...)coercexto a dict.table
-
is.dict.table(x)check ifxis adict.table
-
add(.x, ...)andref_add(.x, ...)add columns to.x. If the column name already exists, an error is given.
-
at(.x, ...)returns the columns at the given indices. Indices can be letters or numbers or both. All columns must exist.
-
at2(x, index)returns the column at the givenindexor signals an error if not found.
-
clear(x)andref_clear(x)remove all elements fromx.
-
clone(x)create a copy ofx.
-
delete_at(.x, ...)andref_delete_at(.x, ...)find and remove columns either by name or index (or both). If one or more columns don't exist, an error is signaled.
-
discard_at(.x, ...)andref_discard_at(.x, ...)find and remove columns either by name or index (or both). Invalid column indices are ignored.
-
has(x, column)check if somecolumnis in dict.table object.
-
has_name(x, name)check ifxhas the given column name.
-
is_empty(x)TRUEif object is empty otherwiseFALSE
-
peek_at(x, ..., .default = NULL)returns the columns at the given indices or (if not found) columns with the given default value.
-
peek_at2(x, index, default = NULL)return column namedindexif it exist otherwise the givendefaultvalue. If the default length does not match the number of rows, it is recycled accordingly and a warning is given, unless the default value has a length of 1, in which case recycling is done silently.
-
ref_pop(.x, index)return element at given column index and remove the column from the dict.table object.
-
rename(.x, old, new)andref_rename(.x, old, new)rename one or more columns fromoldtonew, respectively, by copy and in place (i.e. by reference).
-
replace_at(.x, .., .add = FALSE)andref_replace_at(.x, ..., .add = FALSE)replace values at given indices. If a given index is invalid, an error is signaled unless.addwas set toTRUE.
-
update(object, other)andref_update(object, other)adds columns ofotherdict that are not yet inobjectand replaces the values at existing columns.
See Also
Examples
# Some basic examples using some typical data.table and dict operations.
# The constructor can take the 'key' argument known from data.table:
require(data.table)
dit = dict.table(x = rep(c("b","a","c"), each = 3), y = c(1,3,6), key = "y")
print(dit)
setkey(dit, "x") # sort by 'x'
print(dit)
(add(dit, "v" = 1:9)) # add column v = 1:9
dit[y > 5]
(ref_discard_at(dit, "x")) # discard column 'x'
try(at(dit, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(replace_at(dit, x = 0)) # cannot be replaced, if it does not exist
dit = replace_at(dit, x = 0, .add = TRUE) # ok - re-adds column 'x' with all 0s
peek_at(dit, "x") # glance at column 'x'
has_name(dit, "x") # TRUE
ref_pop(dit, "x") # get column and remove it
has_name(dit, "x") # FALSE
# Copy and reference semantics when coercing *from* a data.table
dat = data.table(a = 1, b = 2)
dit = as.dict.table(dat)
is.dict.table(dit) # TRUE
is.dict.table(dat) # FALSE
ref_replace_at(dit, "a", 9)
dit[["a"]] # 9
dat[["a"]] # 1
dit.dat = as.dict.table(dat, copy = FALSE) # init by reference
ref_replace_at(dit.dat, "a", 9)
dat[["a"]] # 9
is.dict.table(dit.dat) # TRUE
is.dict.table(dat) # TRUE now as well!
# Coerce from dict
d = dict(a = 1, b = 1:3)
as.dict.table(d)
dit = dict.table(a = 1:2, b = 1:2)
rbind(dit, dit)
# rbind ...
dit = dict.table(a = 1:2, b = 1:2)
rbind(dit, dit)
# ... can be mixed with data.tables
dat = data.table(a = 3:4, b = 3:4)
rbind(dit, dat) # yields a dict.table
rbind(dat, dit) # yields a data.table
# cbind ...
dit = dict.table(a = 1:2, b = 1:2)
dit2 = dict.table(c = 3:4, d = 5:6)
cbind(dit, dit2)
# ... can be mixed with data.tables
dat = data.table(x = 3:4, y = 3:4)
cbind(dit, dat)
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3)
add(dit, b = 3:1, d = 4:6)
try(add(dit, a = 7:9)) # column 'a' already exists
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
at(dit, "a")
at(dit, 2)
at(dit, "a", 2)
try(at(dit, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(at(dit, 1:3)) # index 3 exceeds length of dict.table
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
at2(dit, 1)
at2(dit, "a")
at2(dit, 2)
try(at2(dit, "x")) # index 'x' not found
try(at2(dit, 5)) # index 5 exceeds length of dict.table
dit = dict.table(a = 1, b = 2)
clear(dit)
dit
ref_clear(dit)
dit
d = dict.table(a = 1:2, b = 3:4)
d2 = clone(d)
ref_clear(d)
print(d2)
(dit = as.dict.table(head(sleep)))
delete_at(dit, "ID")
delete_at(dit, "ID", 1)
try({
delete_at(dit, "foo") # Column 'foo' not in dict.table
})
dit = as.dict.table(head(sleep))
discard_at(dit, "ID")
discard_at(dit, "ID", 1)
discard_at(dit, "foo") # ignored
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = as.list(4:6))
has(dit, 1:3) # TRUE
has(dit, 4:6) # FALSE
has(dit, as.list(4:6)) # TRUE
dit = dict.table(a = 1, b = 2)
has_name(dit, "a") # TRUE
has_name(dit, "x") # FALSE
d = dict.table(a = 1:4, b = 4:1)
is_empty(d)
is_empty(clear(d))
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
peek_at(dit, "a")
peek_at(dit, 1)
peek_at(dit, 3)
peek_at(dit, "x")
peek_at(dit, "x", .default = 0)
peek_at(dit, "a", "x", .default = 0)
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
peek_at2(dit, "a")
peek_at2(dit, 1)
peek_at2(dit, 3)
peek_at2(dit, 3, default = 9)
peek_at2(dit, "x")
peek_at2(dit, "x", default = 0)
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
ref_pop(dit, "a")
ref_pop(dit, 1)
try({
ref_pop(dit, "x") # index 'x' not found
})
dit = dict.table(a = 1, b = 2, c = 3)
rename(dit, c("a", "b"), c("a1", "y"))
print(dit)
ref_rename(dit, c("a", "b"), c("a1", "y"))
print(dit)
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3)
replace_at(dit, "a", 3:1)
try({
replace_at(dit, "b", 4:6) # column 'b' not in dict.table
})
replace_at(dit, "b", 4:6, .add = TRUE) # ok, adds column
# Update parts of tables (second overwrites columns of the first)
dit1 = dict.table(a = 1:2, b = 3:4)
dit2 = dict.table( b = 5:6, c = 8:9)
update(dit1, dit2)
update(dit2, dit1)
Discard Container Elements
Description
Search and remove an element from an object. If the element is not found, ignore the attempt.
Usage
discard(.x, ...)
ref_discard(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
discard(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
ref_discard(.x, ...)
Arguments
.x |
any |
... |
elements to be discarded. |
Value
For Container, an object of class Container (or one of the
respective derived classes).
Examples
s = setnew("a", num = 1:3, data = iris)
print(s)
discard(s, 1:3, "a")
discard(s, iris)
discard(s, "b") # ignored
Discard Elements at Indices
Description
Search and remove values at given indices, which can be numeric or character or both. Invalid indices are ignored.
Usage
discard_at(.x, ...)
ref_discard_at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
discard_at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
ref_discard_at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
discard_at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
ref_discard_at(.x, ...)
Arguments
.x |
any |
... |
indices at which values are to be discarded. |
Value
For Container, an object of class Container (or one of the
respective derived classes).
For dict.table, an object of class dict.table.
Examples
co = container(a = 1, b = 2, 3)
discard_at(co, "a", "b") # [3]
discard_at(co, 1:2) # [3]
discard_at(co, "a", 3) # [b = 2]
discard_at(co, "x") # ignored
dit = as.dict.table(head(sleep))
discard_at(dit, "ID")
discard_at(dit, "ID", 1)
discard_at(dit, "foo") # ignored
Check for Element
Description
Check for Element
Usage
has(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
has(x, elem, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
has(x, column, ...)
Arguments
x |
any |
... |
additional arguments to be passed to or from methods. |
elem |
some element to be found. |
column |
vector of values with the same length as the number of rows
of the |
Value
TRUE if element is in x and otherwise FALSE.
For dict.table, TRUE if column exists in x otherwise FALSE.
See Also
Examples
co = container(1, 2, mean)
has(co, 1) # TRUE
has(co, mean) # TRUE
has(co, 1:2) # FALSE
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = as.list(4:6))
has(dit, 1:3) # TRUE
has(dit, 4:6) # FALSE
has(dit, as.list(4:6)) # TRUE
Check for Name
Description
Check for Name
Usage
has_name(x, name)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
has_name(x, name)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
has_name(x, name)
Arguments
x |
any |
name |
|
Value
TRUE if name is in x and otherwise FALSE.
For dict.table TRUE if the dict.table objects has the given
column name, otherwise FALSE.
See Also
Examples
co = container(a = 1, 2, f = mean)
has_name(co, "a") # TRUE
has_name(co, "f") # TRUE
has_name(co, "2") # FALSE
dit = dict.table(a = 1:2, b = 3:4)
has_name(dit, "a") # TRUE
has_name(dit, "x") # FALSE
Check if Object is Empty
Description
Check if Object is Empty
Usage
is_empty(x)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
is_empty(x)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
is_empty(x)
Arguments
x |
any |
Value
TRUE if object is empty otherwise FALSE.
Examples
co = container(1, 2)
is_empty(co)
is_empty(clear(co))
d = dict.table(a = 1:4, b = 4:1)
is_empty(d)
is_empty(clear(d))
Iterate over Sequences
Description
An Iterator is an object that allows to iterate over
sequences. It implements next_iter() and get_value() to iterate and retrieve the
value of the sequence it is associated with.
For documentation of the methods see Iterator.
Usage
iter(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
iter(x, ...)
## Default S3 method:
iter(x, ...)
is.iterator(x)
is.iterable(x)
begin(it)
get_value(it)
get_next(it)
has_next(it)
has_value(it)
pos(it)
next_iter(it)
reset_iter(it)
## S3 method for class 'Iterator'
length(x)
Arguments
x |
an object of class Iterable or any other |
... |
other parameters passed to or from methods |
it |
|
Value
length returns the number of elements that can be iterated over.
See Also
For the class documentation see Iterator.
Examples
# Numeric Vector
v = 1:3
it = iter(v)
it
try(it$get_value()) # iterator does not point at a value
has_value(it)
has_next(it)
next_iter(it)
get_value(it)
get_next(it)
get_next(it)
it
has_next(it)
begin(it)
get_value(it)
reset_iter(it)
# Works on copy of Container
co = container(1, 2, 3)
it = iter(co)
get_next(it)
ref_discard(co, 2)
co
it
get_next(it)
ref_clear(co)
co
it
get_next(it)
begin(it)
Peek at Left or Right of a Deque
Description
Try to access first or last element and return some default value if not found.
In contrast to [at2()], this function provides a less stricter element
access, that is, it remains valid even if peeked elements don't exist.
Usage
peekleft(x, default = NULL)
peek(x, default = NULL)
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
peek(x, default = NULL)
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
peekleft(x, default = NULL)
Arguments
x |
a |
default |
value to be returned if peeked value does not exist. |
Details
peek peek at last element of a Deque.
peekleft peek at first element of a Deque.
Value
The first (peekleft) or last (peek) element.
See Also
at2() for strict element extraction
Examples
# Deque
d = deque(1, 2, 3)
peek(d)
peekleft(d)
peek(deque())
peek(deque(), default = 0)
peekleft(deque(), default = 0)
Peek at Indices
Description
Try to access elements and return default values if not found.
In contrast to [at()], this function provides a less stricter element
access, that is, it remains valid even if elements don't exist.
Usage
peek_at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
peek_at(.x, ..., .default = NULL)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
peek_at(.x, ..., .default = NULL)
Arguments
.x |
an |
... |
indices of elements to be extracted |
.default |
value to be returned if peeked value does not exist. |
Details
peek_at tries to access specific values.
Value
For Container, returns the value at the given indices or (if not
found) the given default value.
For dict.table, returns the columns at the given indices or (if not
found) columns with the given default value.
See Also
at() for strict element extraction
Examples
# Container
co = container(a = 1, 2, b = 3, 4)
peek_at(co, 1)
peek_at(co, "a")
peek_at(co, "x")
peek_at(co, "x", .default = 0)
peek_at(co, "a", "x", 2, 9, .default = -1)
# Dict
d = dict(a = 1, b = 1:3)
peek_at(d, "b")
peek_at(d, "x")
peek_at(d, "x", .default = 4:7)
# dict.table
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
peek_at(dit, "a")
peek_at(dit, 1)
peek_at(dit, 3)
peek_at(dit, "x")
peek_at(dit, "x", .default = 0)
peek_at(dit, "a", "x", .default = 0)
Peek at Single Index
Description
Try to access element and return some default value if not found.
In contrast to [at2()], this function provides a less stricter element
access, that is, it remains valid even if peeked elements don't exist.
Usage
peek_at2(x, index, default = NULL)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
peek_at2(x, index, default = NULL)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
peek_at2(x, index, default = NULL)
Arguments
x |
an |
index |
|
default |
value to be returned if peeked value does not exist. |
Value
For Container, returns the value at the given index or (if not
found) the given default value.
For dict.table, returns the column named index if it exist
otherwise the given default value. If the default length does not match
the number of rows, it is recycled accordingly and a warning is given,
unless the default value has a length of 1, in which case recycling is
done silently.
See Also
at2() for strict element extraction
Examples
# Container
co = container(a = 1, 2, b = 3, 4)
peek_at2(co, 1)
peek_at2(co, "a")
peek_at2(co, "x")
peek_at2(co, "x", default = 0)
# Dict
d = dict(a = 1, b = 1:3)
peek_at2(d, "b")
peek_at2(d, "x")
peek_at2(d, "x", default = 4:7)
# dict.table
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
peek_at2(dit, "a")
peek_at2(dit, 1)
peek_at2(dit, 3)
peek_at2(dit, 3, default = 9)
peek_at2(dit, "x")
peek_at2(dit, "x", default = 0)
Get and Remove Element
Description
Search and return an element and remove it afterwards from the object. If the element is not found, signal an error.
Usage
ref_pop(.x, ...)
ref_popleft(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
ref_pop(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
ref_popleft(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
ref_pop(.x, index, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
ref_pop(.x, index, ...)
Arguments
.x |
any |
... |
additional arguments to be passed to or from methods. |
index |
|
Details
All functions work by reference, that is, the original object is altered.
ref_pop(.x) tries to access specific values.
ref_popleft(.x) pops first element of a Deque.
Value
For Deque the first (ref_popleft) or last (ref_pop) element of
the deque after it was removed.
For Container the value at the given index after it was removed from
the Container object. If index is not found, an error is raised.
For dict.table, returns the column at the given index after it was
removed from the dict.table. If column does not exist, an error is raised.
See Also
Examples
# Deque
d = deque(1, 2, 3)
ref_pop(d)
ref_popleft(d)
try({
ref_pop(deque()) # pop at empty Deque
})
# Container
co = container(a = 1, b = 1:3, d = "foo")
ref_pop(co, "b")
ref_pop(co, 1)
try({
ref_pop(co, "x") # index 'x' not found
})
# dict.table
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
ref_pop(dit, "a")
ref_pop(dit, 1)
try({
ref_pop(dit, "x") # index 'x' not found
})
Rename Elements Safely
Description
Search for old name and replace it by new name. If either the old name does not exist or the name would result in a name-clash with an already existing name, an error is signaled.
Usage
rename(.x, old, new)
ref_rename(.x, old, new)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
rename(.x, old, new)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
rename(.x, old, new)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
ref_rename(.x, old, new)
## Default S3 method:
rename(.x, old, new)
Arguments
.x |
|
old |
|
new |
|
Details
The passed old and new names can be vectors but always must have the same length and must be unique to prevent double-renaming.
rename uses copy semantics while ref_rename works by reference,
that is, it renames elements in place.
Value
For standard R vectors renames old to new and returns the
renamed vector.
For Container, an object of class Container (or one of the
respective derived classes).
For dict.table renames key old to new in place (i.e. by
reference) and invisibly returns the dict.table() object.
Examples
# Container
co = container(a = 1, b = 2, 3)
rename(co, c("a", "b"), c("a1", "y"))
print(co)
ref_rename(co, c("a", "b"), c("a1", "y"))
print(co)
# dict.table
dit = dict.table(a = 1, b = 2, c = 3)
rename(dit, c("a", "b"), c("a1", "y"))
print(dit)
ref_rename(dit, c("a", "b"), c("a1", "y"))
print(dit)
Replace Values in Containers Safely
Description
Try to find and replace elements and signal an error if not
found, unless it is stated to explicitly add the element (see option add).
Usage
replace(.x, ...)
ref_replace(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
replace(.x, old, new, add = FALSE, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
ref_replace(.x, old, new, add = FALSE, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Dict'
replace(.x, old, new, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Dict'
ref_replace(.x, old, new, ...)
Arguments
.x |
any |
... |
additional arguments to be passed to or from methods. |
old |
old element to be found and replaced. |
new |
the new element replacing the old one. |
add |
|
Details
replace uses copy semantics while ref_replace works by reference.
Value
For Container, an object of class Container (or one of the
respective derived classes).
For Dict an object of class Dict.
Examples
co = container("x", 9)
replace(co, 9, 0)
replace(co, "x", 0)
try({
replace(co, "z", 0) # old element ("z") is not in Container
})
replace(co, "z", 0, add = TRUE) # just add the zero without replacement
d = dict(a = 1, b = "z")
replace(d, 1, 1:5)
replace(d, "z", "a")
try({
replace(d, "a", 2) # old element ("a") is not in Dict
})
Replace Values at Indices Safely
Description
Try to find and replace elements at given indices and signal an
error if not found, unless it is stated to explicitly add the element (see
option add).
Usage
replace_at(.x, ...)
ref_replace_at(.x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
replace_at(.x, ..., .add = FALSE)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
ref_replace_at(.x, ..., .add = FALSE)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
replace_at(.x, ..., .add = FALSE)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
ref_replace_at(.x, ..., .add = FALSE)
Arguments
.x |
any |
... |
either name = value pairs or two vectors/lists with names/values to be replaced. |
.add |
|
Details
replace_at uses copy semantics while ref_replace_at works by
reference.
Value
For Container, an object of class Container (or one of the
respective derived classes).
For dict.table an object of class dict.table.
Examples
co = container(a = 0, b = "z")
replace_at(co, a = 1, b = 2)
replace_at(co, 1:2, 1:2) # same
replace_at(co, c("a", "b"), list(1, 2)) # same
try({
replace_at(co, x = 1) # names(s) not found: 'x'
})
replace_at(co, x = 1, .add = TRUE) # ok (adds x = 1)
dit = dict.table(a = 1:3, b = 4:6)
replace_at(dit, a = 3:1)
replace_at(dit, 1, 3:1) # same
replace_at(dit, "a", 3:1) # same
replace_at(dit, a = 3:1, b = 6:4)
replace_at(dit, 1:2, list(3:1, 6:4)) # same
try({
replace_at(dit, x = 1) # column(s) not found: 'x'
})
replace_at(dit, x = 1, .add = TRUE) # ok (adds column)
Reverse Elements
Description
rev provides a reversed version of its argument.
Usage
ref_rev(x)
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
ref_rev(x)
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
rev(x)
Arguments
x |
|
Details
rev uses copy semantics while ref_rev works by reference,
that is, it reverse all elements in place.
Value
For Deque, an object of class Deque
See Also
Examples
d = deque(a = 1, b = 2, 3)
rev(d)
print(d)
ref_rev(d)
print(d)
Rotate Elements
Description
Rotate all elements n steps to the right. If n is
negative, rotate to the left.
Usage
rotate(x, n = 1L)
ref_rotate(x, n = 1L)
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
rotate(x, n = 1L)
## S3 method for class 'Deque'
ref_rotate(x, n = 1L)
Arguments
x |
any |
n |
|
Details
While rotate uses copy semantics, ref_rotate works by reference,
that is, rotates in place on the original object.
Value
For Deque returns the rotated Deque() object.
Examples
d = deque(1, 2, 3, 4)
rotate(d)
rotate(d, n = 2)
Unpack Nested Objects
Description
Similary to unlist() recursively unpacks any (possibly nested) structure
into a flat list. In contrast to unlist(), unpack() also works with
(possibly nested) Container() objects. In principle, it works for any
object that can be transformed to a list via as.list.
Usage
unpack(x, recursive = TRUE, use.names = TRUE)
Arguments
x |
any |
recursive |
|
use.names |
|
Value
a list
Update Object with Elements from Another Object
Description
Takes an object and updates it with values from another object by replacing the values at existing names and adding values at new names of the other object. A common use case is to update parameter lists.
Usage
ref_update(object, other, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
update(object, other, ...)
## S3 method for class 'Container'
ref_update(object, other, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
update(object, other, ...)
## S3 method for class 'dict.table'
ref_update(object, other, ...)
## S3 method for class 'list'
update(object, other, ...)
Arguments
object |
any |
other |
any object of the same type as |
... |
additional arguments to be passed to or from methods. |
Details
update uses copy semantics while ref_update works by reference,
that is, updates in place.
Value
For Container, an object of class Container (or one of the
respective derived classes).
For dict.table an object of class dict.table.
For list, an updated object of class list.
Examples
d1 = dict(a = 1, b = 2)
d2 = dict( b = 0, c = 3)
update(d1, d2) # {a = 1, b = 0, c = 3}
update(d2, d1) # {a = 1, b = 2, c = 3}
dit1 = dict.table(a = 1:2, b = 3:4)
dit2 = dict.table( b = 5:6, c = 8:9)
update(d1, d2)
update(d2, d1)
l1 = list(1, b = 2)
l2 = list( b = 0, c = 3)
update(l1, l2)
update(l2, l1)