The hardware and bandwidth for this mirror is donated by METANET, the Webhosting and Full Service-Cloud Provider.
If you wish to report a bug, or if you are interested in having us mirror your free-software or open-source project, please feel free to contact us at mirror[@]metanet.ch.
R’s built-in copy-on-modify behavior prevents the user from having two symbols always pointing to the same object. Because pointers, as they are common in other programming languages, are essentially symbols (variables) related to an object that has already another symbol attached to it, it is clear that pointers do not fit naturally into R’s language concept.
However, pointers would be incredibly useful, e.g. when you work with complex subsets of dataframes. These complex filtering conditions make the code harder to read and to maintain. For this reason, it would be good to have a kind of ‘abbreviation’ or ‘shortcut’ that lets you write such filtering conditions more efficiently.
The pointr
package provides
functionality to create pointers to any R object easily, including
pointers to subsets/selections from dataframes.
pointr
pointr
To install the CRAN version of pointr
from the R console, just call:
install.packages("pointr", dependencies = TRUE)
Before using pointr
, it needs to be
attached to the package search path:
library(pointr)
Now, we are ready to go.
From the user’s perspective, pointr
provides three simple functions:
ptr(symbol1, symbol2)
creates a
pointer called symbol1
to the object in
symbol2
. The function has no return value. The
symbol1
pointer variable is created by the function. Both
arguments, symbol1
and symbol2
, are
strings.
rm.ptr(symbol1, keep=TRUE)
removes
the pointer. It deletes the hidden access function
.symbol1()
. If keep == FALSE
it also deletes
the pointer variable symbol1
. If, however
keep == FALSE
a copy of the object that the pointer refers
to is stored in the symbol1
variable. The
symbol1
argument is a string.
where(symbol1)
shows the name of
the object the pointer symbol1
points to. The
symbol1
argument is a character vector.
Pointers work like the referenced variable itself. You can, for example, print them (which prints the contents of the referenced variable) or assign values to them (which assigns the values to the referenced variable).
First, we define a variable myvar
and create a pointer
mypointer
to this variable. Accessing the pointer
mypointer
actually reads myvar
.
<- 3
myvar ptr("mypointer", "myvar")
mypointer
## [1] 3
Accordingly, changes to myvar
can be seen using the
pointer.
<- 5
myvar mypointer
## [1] 5
The pointer can also be used in assignments; this changes the variables the pointer points to:
<- 7
mypointer myvar
## [1] 7
We create a simple dataframe:
<- data.frame(list(var1 = c(1,2,3), var2 = c("a", "b", "c")), stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
df df
## var1 var2
## 1 1 a
## 2 2 b
## 3 3 c
Now we set a pointer sel
to a subset of
df
:
<- 2
i ptr("sel", "df$var2[i]")
We can now change…
<- "hello"
sel $var2[i] df
## [1] "hello"
and read data from df
using the sel
pointer:
$var2[i] <- "world"
df sel
## [1] "world"
We can also check easily where our pointer points to:
where.ptr("sel")
## [1] "world"
When the index variable i
changes, our pointer adjusts
accordingly:
<- 3
i sel
## [1] "c"
Active bindings are used to create the
pointr
pointers. For each pointer an
object with active binding is created. Every time the pointer is
accessed, the active binding calls a hidden function called
.pointer
where pointer
is the name of
the pointer variable. This function evaluates the assignment (if the
user assigns a value to the pointer) or evaluates the object the pointer
refers to as such (if the user accesses the contents of the object the
pointer points to). This way it is possible not only to address objects
like vectors or dataframes but also to have pointers to things like, for
example, subsets of datafames.
All pointr
functions operate in the
environment in which the pointer is created.
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.