Conversation started Mar 4, 2013 at 9:40.
Mar 4, 2013 09:40
@geektrader It's not really such a bad idea to have an object called matrix, is it? Possibly confusing, but that's about it.
@Andrie I agree with you. Just if you type matrix to see the code of the function you will get the object...
Yes, then you simply go base::matrix and all is fine.
Yes.
It's just that I see this being issued as a warning more and more, somewhat unnecessarily and out of context.
Which is why I asked this:
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Q: In R, what exactly is the problem with having variables with the same name as base R functions?

AndrieIt seems to be generally considered poor programming practise to use variable names that have functions in base R with the same name. For example, it is tempting to write: data <- data.frame(...) df <- data.frame(...) Now, the function data loads data sets while the function df comput...

@Andrie, but it can also bite you in other cases: stackoverflow.com/q/15173269/1270695
I guess it sort of depends on where the functions you use regularly start their searching?
The question I've linked to has their own "mode", "cat", and "levels", which can be distracting, even if it didn't lead to errors. That said, the number of functions available with R makes it pretty hard to not overlap!
Mar 4, 2013 09:51
@AnandaMahto Nice example, but that is just slightly different, i.e. redefining functions.
Creating a (non-function) object and calling it matrix will never cause that problem.
True. It just came to mind when I read your comment.
Because of its recency.
@Andrie I read your question. There is a simple argument forgotten by answers , is the visibility of code, for example if I call variable t, and transpose t , t(t), c(c), I think code looks ugly.
Yes, so it makes your code easier to understand. I agree with that.
But that might be because you know about t. It's not necessarily the most common function, depending on the type of analysis you typically do.
And I agree with that too.
Mar 4, 2013 09:55
and c?
mode is really rather obscure
@Andrie Not obscure, per-se, but unexpected?
I know a lot of people who see that there's a mean and a median, and expect mode to be, guess what?
:-)
 
Conversation ended Mar 4, 2013 at 9:57.