https://www.antoinechampion.com/
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This package adds an optional type, similar to
Option in F#, OCaml and Scala, to Maybe in
Haskell, and to nullable types in C#.
It should be used instead of NULL for values that might be
missing or otherwise invalid.
This package also introduces pattern matching.
option is an object wrapper which indicates whether the
object is valid or not.
An optional variable can be set to option(object) or to
none.
## [1] "optional"
Operators and print will have the same behavior with an
optional than with its base type.
## [1] TRUE
## [1] 5
Note that option(option(obj)) equals
option(obj) and that option(none) equals
FALSE.
To check whether an optional object is set to a value or to
none, one can use the function some().
## [1] TRUE
## [1] FALSE
Given a function f(), to handle properly
optional arguments and wraps its return type into an
optional, one should use make_opt() the
following way:
f_opt <- make_opt(f)
optional argument passed to f_opt() will
be converted to its original type before being sent to f().
If one or more of them is none, several behaviors are
available (see ?make_opt).
f() returns null, or if an error is thrown during its
execution, then f_opt() returns none. Else it
will return optional(f(…)).
For instance:
## [1] 2 5
## [1] "None"
Patterns are used in many functional languages in order to process variables in an exhaustive way.
The syntax is the following:
match_with( variable,
pattern , result-function,
...
If variable matches a pattern,
result-function is called. For comparing optional types, it
is a better habit to use match_with() rather than a
conditional statement.
## [1] "5"
pattern can be either:
variable),
variable is in the list),
magrittr functional sequence that matches if it returns
variable. The dot . denotes the variable to be
matched.
result-function takes no arguments, it will be called as
is. Else, the only argument that will be sent is variable.
You can also use the fallthrough function fallthrough() to
permit the matching to continue even if the current pattern is matched.
a <- 4
match_with(a,
1, function() "Matched exact value",
list(2, 3, 4), fallthrough(function() "Matched in list"),
. %>% if (. > 3)., function(x) paste0("Matched in condition: ",x,">3")
)
## [1] "Matched in list" "Matched in condition: 4>3"