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Title: Incomplete Array with Arbitrary R Objects as Indices
Version: 0.1.1
Description: The aim of the package is to create data objects which allow for accesses like x["test"] and x["test","test"].
License: GPL-3
Encoding: UTF-8
LazyData: true
RoxygenNote: 7.1.1
Suggests: testthat, knitr, rmarkdown
VignetteBuilder: knitr
NeedsCompilation: no
Packaged: 2020-09-03 12:04:23 UTC; sk
Author: Sigbert Klinke [aut, cre]
Maintainer: Sigbert Klinke <sigbert@hu-berlin.de>
Repository: CRAN
Date/Publication: 2020-09-10 14:40:03 UTC

Extract or Replace one Element of a listArray

Description

Operators acting on one element of a listArray to extract or replace it.

Usage

## S3 method for class 'listArray'
x[...]

## S3 replacement method for class 'listArray'
x[...] <- value

Arguments

x

object from which to extract a element or in which to replace a element.

...

indices specifying the element to extract or replace. Indices can consist of any R Object.

value

value which replaces a listArray element

Value

Returns or sets the selected element.

Examples

l <- listArray()
l[1] <- 1
l[1]
#
l[2,3] <- "test"
l[2,3]
#
l[2:3] <- "vector"
l[2:3]
l[2,3]
#
l['iris'] <- iris
head(l['iris'])
#
l[letters[1:5]] <- letters[1:5]
l[letters[1:5]]
#
l[mean] <- mean
l[mean](0:10)

hasKey

Description

Checks if a specific index exists

Usage

hasKey(x, ...)

Arguments

x

listArray object

...

index to check

Value

logical: TRUE index exists, FALSE index exists not

Examples

l <- listArray()
l[1] <- 1
hasKey(l, 1)
l[2,3] <- "test"
hasKey(l, 2, 3)
l[2:3] <- "vector"
hasKey(l, 2:3)
l['iris'] <- iris
hasKey(l, iris) # FALSE
l[mean] <- mean
hasKey(l, mean)
# if you have not stored NULL objects in your listArray
is.null(l[mean])
is.null(l[iris])

key

Description

Creates a character key from arbitray R objects. For more details see vignette("listArray").

Usage

key(...)

Arguments

...

R objects

Value

a unique character key

Examples

key(1)
key(2,3)
key(1:3)
key(mean)
key('test')
key(letters[1:5])
key(list(1))
key(iris)

Returns a list of indices as string, list or unique values (like dimnames).

Description

Returns a list of indices as string, list or unique values (like dimnames).

Usage

keys(x, type = "character")

Arguments

x

listArray object

type

character: return the indices as string, list or unique values (default: character)

Value

Returns the indices as string, list or unique indices. If type is

type="character"

a character vector with the retranslated indices

type="list"

as list of lists with the retranslated indices

type="names"

as list of lists with the retranslated unique(!) indices like dimnames

Examples

l <- listArray(matrix(1:9, 3, 3))
k <- keys(l)
k
# access object in listArray
pos <- which(k=='3, 2')
l[[pos]]
#
l["test"] <- "test"
keys(l, 'c') # as keys(l)
keys(l, 'l')
keys(l, 'n')
# Note that l['test'][3] will deliver NULL since the entry does not exist

listArray

Description

Creates either an empty listArray object or a listArray object from a vector, array or list. See also vignette("listArray").

Usage

listArray(x, ...)

## Default S3 method:
listArray(x, use.names = TRUE, ignore = NULL, env = FALSE, ...)

Arguments

x

vector, array or list

...

further arguments given to new.env if an environment is used

use.names

logical: if the names from x or indices should be used (default: TRUE)

ignore

values to ignore for the listArray object

env

logical: if the listArray creates a list or an environment (default: FALSE)

Value

a listArray object

Examples

# empty listArray
l <- listArray()
# listArray from a numerical vector
v <- 1:5
l <- listArray(v)
# listArray from a text vector
v <- letters[1:5]
l <- listArray(v)
#' # listArray from a matrix
m <- matrix(1:9, 3, 3)
l <- listArray(m)
#' # listArray from a list
v <- as.list(1:5)
l <- listArray(v)

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