| Type: | Package |
| Title: | Advanced R Pipes |
| Version: | 0.1.2 |
| Description: | Provides convenience functions for programming with 'magrittr' pipes. Conditional pipes, a string prefixer and a function to pipe the given object into a specific argument given by character name are currently supported. It is named after the dadaist Hans Arp, a friend of Rene Magritte. |
| License: | GPL (≥ 3) |
| URL: | https://github.com/statnmap/arpr |
| BugReports: | https://github.com/statnmap/arpr/issues |
| Imports: | magrittr, rlang |
| Suggests: | testthat (≥ 3.0.0) |
| Config/testthat/edition: | 3 |
| Encoding: | UTF-8 |
| RoxygenNote: | 7.1.1 |
| NeedsCompilation: | no |
| Packaged: | 2021-08-01 12:12:23 UTC; srochett |
| Author: | Jirka Lewandowski [aut],
Sébastien Rochette
|
| Maintainer: | Sébastien Rochette <sebastien@thinkr.fr> |
| Repository: | CRAN |
| Date/Publication: | 2021-08-02 15:50:05 UTC |
arpr: Advanced R Pipes
Description
Provides convenience functions for programming with 'magrittr' pipes. Conditional pipes, a string prefixer and a function to pipe the given object into a specific argument given by character name are currently supported. It is named after the dadaist Hans Arp, a friend of Rene Magritte.
Author(s)
Maintainer: Sébastien Rochette sebastien@thinkr.fr (ORCID)
Authors:
Jirka Lewandowski jirka.lewandowski@wzb.eu
See Also
Useful links:
Pipe operator
Description
See magrittr::%>% for details.
Usage
lhs %>% rhs
Arguments
lhs |
A value or the magrittr placeholder. |
rhs |
A function call using the magrittr semantics. |
Value
The result of calling rhs(lhs).
browser() in a magrittr pipe
Description
browser() in a magrittr pipe
Usage
browse_r(x, ...)
Arguments
x |
input |
... |
passed on to browser() |
Value
Used for side effect. Open a browser inside the pipe workflow.
Create a constant function
Description
Create a constant function
Usage
const(val = NULL)
Arguments
val |
return value of constant function (defaults to NULL) |
Value
A function always returning val accepting arbitrary arguments (dots)
Apply a function depending on test output
Description
iff returns output of the function if and only if test is TRUE.
iffn returns output of the function if and only if test is FALSE.
They return the original value otherwise.
iffelse returns output of the first function if test is TRUE,
output of the second function otherwise.
Usage
iff(obj, test, fun, ...)
iffn(obj, test, fun, ...)
iffelse(obj, test, true_fun, false_fun, ...)
Arguments
obj |
object to apply test and fun to |
test |
logical or function to apply to test |
fun |
function to apply |
... |
passed on to test |
true_fun |
function to apply when test is true |
false_fun |
function to apply when test is false |
Value
Output of function fun applied to the original value or the
original value, depending on the test.
Examples
x <- 1
x %>%
iff(is.na, const(0))
x <- NA
x %>%
iff(is.na, const(0))
x <- 1
x %>%
iff(x <= 0, function(x) { x - 2 })
x <- -1
x %>%
iff(x <= 0, function(x) { x - 2 })
x <- NA
x %>%
iffn(is.na, exp)
x <- 10
x %>%
iffn(is.na, exp)
Pipe into specific formal argument
Description
This rotates the order of the arguments such that the one named
in param_name comes first and then calls the function.
Usage
pipe_into(x, param_name, fun, ...)
Arguments
x |
value to be piped into fun |
param_name |
name of the argument that x should be assigned to |
fun |
function |
... |
further arguments for fun |
Value
Output of fun.
Examples
require(magrittr)
5L %>%
pipe_into("digits", format, 2.731234567)
Prefix a string of text
Description
Convenience function to use with magrittr
wraps paste0(), hence vectorised as paste0()
Usage
prefix(text, ...)
Arguments
text |
goes to the end, rest |
... |
goes to the front. |
Value
Character. Character chain with the prefix added.
Examples
require(magrittr)
"xyz" %>%
prefix("abc")
Prefix a path
Description
file.path with arguments reversed
Usage
prefix_path(path, prefix, ...)
Arguments
path |
path to be prefixed |
prefix |
path to be appended before |
... |
passed on to file.path |
Value
file.path(prefix, path, ...)
Remove names of an object
Description
Remove names of an object
Usage
remove_names(x)
Arguments
x |
object to unname |
Value
x without names.