oh, didn't know that. figured all the functions on the ?Reduce page were special, having capitalized names and referring to concepts from "real" programming languages
anyway, he caveats Rcpp solutions regarding the cost of their compile time. and Rcpp really is the right solution for efficiency in many cases where i've seen him use it
yeah, i still cant understand why your solution is equivalent to OPs logic, but it sure looks like a code golf
which is good as far as Im concerned. It almost feels like R was designed as a code golf language as almost nothing can be efficiently solved without it
@StevenBeaupré i think it may have to do with the big memory requirement of the Reduce approach in this case. maybe sometimes R asks the operating system for enough memory but gets rebuffed/delayed because it's so big...? dunno
it will be harder because they will continue using data.frame syntax until they hit an inconsistency. like DT[,a] not having drop=TRUE or DT[,1.5] giving 1.5 (since Arun only proposed it for integers and characters, not numerics)
that's how most people approach things, not reading the documentation until they hit an inconsistency
(me too)
the [[ doesn't let me pass a vector of ints or chars
DF[1:2] works fine, gives DF subsetted to columns 1 & 2
you use it in your answers, i thought, like DF[,newcols] <- lapply(...) which can be written as DF[newcols] <- lapply(...), not sure which way i've seen you write it
yeah, i've gotten used to thinking about data.frames & data.tables as lists, thanks to seeing lapply(.SD,fun) enough times, but it still seems strange to treat them like more than simple tables/spreadsheets when taking advantage of it with DF[1:2] and length(DF). just a subjective thing
Do you guys avoid answering questions from users who have an history of not upvoting/ticking/commenting quality answers ?
When I see a low-rep user asking a poorly formulated question, I'm always a bit hesitant. I feel like I'm going to waste my time trying to help someone who is not even willing to help himself.
@StevenBeaupré nah, not for voting/ticking. i mostly just judge by the question itself. if i avoid a question because of the user's history it's probably something like: they were advised of a better way of doing something and nonetheless persisted in asking a string of questions premised on doing it the bad way. or if there's a comment stream of them fighting with folks beneath that particular question. basically, i'll avoid a question if the asker doesn't want to be helped