@A5C1D2H2I1M1N2O1R2T1 I have no speakers on my pc. It does sound a little off the headphones but considering that I will be also napping then I think it should be fine :D
The intersection of these values = intersect(c(1,2,3), c(4,2,1), c(2,2,2), c(1,3,5)) = NULL. But without the last one it will be 2. — Dr. Richard Tennen10 mins ago
@A5C1D2H2I1M1N2O1R2T1 but I don't tell you the colour I want.
@A5C1D2H2I1M1N2O1R2T1 There are two steps: (1) format as code with Ctrl-K (2) format as blockquote with Ctrl-Q. So the output has a fixed font but can be distinguished from code above or below. That's very convenient for a lazybone like me. Credits go to @Jaap. At least, I've seen that in an answer by him.
@A5C1D2H2I1M1N2O1R2T1 Copying from clipboard into an SO post works fine. But I mean if someone else wants to copy the output from an finally posted answer (for whatever reason) then the leading ## have to be removed again. Sorry for not being clear enough.
@A5C1D2H2I1M1N2O1R2T1 I know it. I was the one who upvoted ;-)
huh...? So python can take multiple column names for 1 column? I call `list` to get the `names` of the data frame and I get this list(fw_win_to_model)
['username', 'freq', 'n_host', '4624', '4625', '4634', '4648', ('destination', 'n_dest_dIps'), ('service', 'n_dest_ports'), ('sourceport', 'n_sport')]
Very. I still need to spend some more time with match.call, which I had guessed was what I should be looking at, but couldn't quite figure out what to do with :-)
Anyone have any insights on this question. The OP's comment on my answer doesn't really make sense to me. Not sure if I'm overlooking something obvious in their comment.
@A5C1D2H2I1M1N2O1R2T1 It's the only thing I could come up with, since list(...) fails but match.call doesn't. It's relatively ok in this case since there aren't any non dots arguments that might complicate things. I presume someone like Hadley or Brodie would have a much better solution.
@A5C1D2H2I1M1N2O1R2T1 If you want to reduce the problem to specifically the match.call or whatever piece I'm happy to look at that. Right now the whole thing is a bit too large to take in the time I have. Is the hacky/informal part how the ... values are recovered?
@BrodieG, Hi. The main contribution from @Axeman was the replace_empty_arguments function for dealing with the ... -- so, yes, that's what I was curious about.
I was trying to look for a [.matrix or [.array or something, but I guess I'm going to have to dig deeper than what I was able to get into during my lunch break today.
@A5C1D2H2I1M1N2O1R2T1 Yeah, you'd have to look at the C code. Not having looked at that specific code, but having looked at other, it's pretty common for C code to test for missigness and then if/else on that. Re @Axeman solution I would probably do something similar, though you need to take care about the evaluation frames to make sure you get the expected result in all circumstances.
It's possible that lapply(a, eval) will produce unexpected results if your functions are in packages and someone else uses them from somewhere other than global env.
You can also use substitute(list(...)) in the case where, unlike with array/matrix, your arguments are genuinely unnamed and you only care about their position. substitute is a little simpler.
Actually you probably have to use match.call, not substitute, because substitute will not properly disambiguate the location of symbols if there are nested frames with ... forwarded.
oy, got a case of DT[, {lots; of; code}, by=g] and can't find a way to print warnings (if any) at each iteration of the loop so i can figure out where problems are happening
guess i need to dig up a catchWarnings or some such
@hadley He wants to implement an [ indexing method for ftable objects, where one can specify multiple dimensions through ..., like for arrays. But we're uncertain what the "correct" way is to deal with empty arguments, since using list(...) gives an error. So how to deal with calls like mytable[c("1st", "3rd"), , "Child", ]? See the question for the long version.
@hadley I'm probably missing something, but doesn't rlang::dot_list evaluate the arguments, which means it can't avoid the missing arg error:
> f_rlang <- function(...) rlang::dots_list(...)
> f_rlang(, 3)
Error in eval_bare(dot$expr, dot$env) :
argument is missing, with no default
And as far as I know, you can't even avoid this with C because there is no public interface that passes arguments through unevaluated.
So, match.call / substitute seem like the only available tools, at least that I know of, but substitute doesn't work correctly in the nested case.
Seems like the closest (sorry if I'm doing this wrong, not super familiar with rlang) is rlang::exprs, but it seems to have the same issue as substitute:
> f_rlang <- function(...) rlang::exprs(...)
> f_mc <- function(...) match.call()
> f_outer <- function(...) list(rlang=f_rlang(...), match.call=f_mc(...))
> str(f_outer(x, y))
List of 2
$ rlang :List of 2
..$ : symbol x
..$ : symbol y
$ match.call: language f_mc(..1, ..2)
match.call correctly returns ..1 and ..2, so these can be evaluated in the correct environment with no possibility of ambiguity (e.g. if f_outer used the symbols x and/or y).
Ah, I hadn't seen the .ignore.empty argument for dots_list, although in this case it drops the argument entirely, which wouldn't work. @hadley is there a way to preserve the position of the empty argument?
BTW, looking at source for rlang, @lionel nice workaround for getting the unevaluated arguments. Wouldn't have occurred to me to pull them directly from the function environment instead of passing them through .Call.
@hadley I can file a bug report if you'd like, but I'm not entirely sure what dots_list is supposed to do when it encounters a missing value that is part of .... Return R_MissingArg? This isn't super useful outside of C as there touching the return value triggers an error.
To recap, the error case is: f_rlang(, 3) (note the missing argument).
I guess you could return a NULL, and add an attribute that indicates whether the NULL is actually a stand in for a missing value.