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Fixed valgrind issue.
Deprecation infrastructure in map_chr()
now has much
less overhead leading to improved performance (#1089).
purrr now requires R 3.5.0.
As of purrr 1.0.0, the map()
family of functions
wraps all errors generated by .f
inside an wrapper error
that tracks the iteration index. As of purrr 1.0.1, this error now has a
custom class (purrr_error_indexed
), location
and name
fields, and is documented in
?purrr_error_indexed
(#1027).
map()
errors with named inputs also report the name
of the element that errored.
Fixed an issue where progress bars weren’t being closed when user
interrupts or errors were encountered during a map()
call
(#1024).
Fixed an invalid C signature for pluck()
(#1018).
Set Biarch: true
to build purrr on 32-bit Windows on
R < 4.2.0 (#1017).
cross()
and all its variants have been deprecated in
favour of tidyr::expand_grid()
. These functions were slow
and buggy and we no longer think they are the right approach to solving
this problem. See #768 for more information.
update_list()
(#858) and rerun()
(#877), and the use of tidyselect with map_at()
and friends
(#874) have been deprecated. These functions use some form of
non-standard evaluation which we now believe is a poor fit for
purrr.
The lift_*
family of functions has been deprecated.
We no longer believe these to be a good fit for purrr because they rely
on a style of function manipulation that is very uncommon in R code
(#871).
prepend()
, rdunif()
,
rbernoulli()
, when()
, and
list_along()
have all been deprecated (#925). It’s now
clear that they don’t align with the core purpose of purrr.
splice()
is deprecated because we no longer believe
that automatic splicing makes for good UI. Instead use
list2()
+ !!!
or list_flatten()
(#869).
Use of map functions with expressions, calls, and pairlists has been deprecated (#961).
All map _raw()
variants have been deprecated because
they are of limited use and you can now use map_vec()
instead (#903).
In map_chr()
, automatic conversion from logical,
integer, and double to character is now deprecated. Use an explicit
as.character()
if needed (#904).
Errors from .f
are now wrapped in an additional
class that gives information about where the error occurred
(#945).
as_function()
and the ...f
argument to
partial()
are no longer supported. They have been defunct
for quite some time.
Soft deprecated functions: %@%
,
reduce_right()
, reduce2_right()
,
accumulate_right()
are now fully deprecated. Similarly, the
.lazy
, .env
, and .first
arguments
to partial()
, and the .right
argument to
detect()
and detect_index()
are fully
deprecated. Removing elements with NULL
in
list_modify()
and list_merge()
is now fully
deprecated.
is_numeric()
and is_scalar_numeric()
have been removed. They have been deprecated since purrr 0.2.3 (Sep
2017).
invoke_*()
is now deprecated. It was superseded in
0.3.0 (Jan 2019) and 3.5 years later, we have decided to deprecate it as
part of the API refinement in the 1.0.0 release.
map_call()
has been removed. It was made defunct in
0.3.0 (Jan 2019).
*_at()
can now take a function (or formula) that’s
passed the vector of element names and returns the elements to
select.
New map_vec()
, map2_vec()
, and
pmap_vec()
work on all types of vectors, extending
map_lgl()
, map_int()
, and friends so that you
can easily work with dates, factors, date-times and more
(#435).
New keep_at()
and discard_at()
that
work like keep()
and discard()
but operation
on element names rather than element contents (#817).
Some mapping functions have now a .progress
argument
to create a progress bar. See ?progress_bars
(#149).
purrr is now licensed as MIT (#805).
modify()
, modify_if()
,
modify_at()
, and modify2()
are no longer
generics. We have discovered a simple implementation that no longer
requires genericity and methods were only provided by a very small
number of packages (#894).
purrr now uses the base pipe (|>
) and anonymous
function short hand (\(x)
), in all examples. This means
that examples will no longer work in R 4.0 and earlier so in those
versions of R, the examples are automatically converted to a regular
section with a note that they might not work (#936).
When map functions fail, they now report the element they failed at (#945).
New modify_tree()
for recursively modifying nested
data structures (#720).
New list_c()
, list_rbind()
, and
list_cbind()
make it easy to c()
,
rbind()
, or cbind()
all of the elements in a
list.
New list_simplify()
reduces a list of length-1
vectors to a simpler atomic or S3 vector (#900).
New list_transpose()
which automatically simplifies
if possible (#875).
accumulate()
and accumulate2()
now both
simplify the output if possible using vctrs. New arguments
simplify
and ptype
allow you to control the
details of simplification (#774, #809).
flatten()
and friends are superseded in favour of
list_flatten()
, list_c()
,
list_cbind()
, and list_rbind()
.
*_dfc()
and *_dfr()
have been
superseded in favour of using the appropriate map function along with
list_rbind()
or list_cbind()
(#912).
simplify()
, simplify_all()
, and
as_vector()
have been superseded in favour of
list_simplify()
. It provides a more consistent definition
of simplification (#900).
transpose()
has been superseded in favour of
list_transpose()
(#875). It has built-in
simplification.
_lgl()
, _int()
, _int()
,
and _dbl()
now use the same (strict) coercion methods as
vctrs (#904). This means that:
map_chr(TRUE, identity)
,
map_chr(0L, identity)
, and
map_chr(1L, identity)
are deprecated because we now believe
that converting a logical/integer/double to a character vector should
require an explicit coercion.
map_int(1.5, identity)
now fails because we believe
that silently truncating doubles to integers is dangerous. But note that
map_int(1, identity)
still works since no numeric precision
is lost.
map_int(c(TRUE, FALSE), identity)
,
map_dbl(c(TRUE, FALSE), identity)
,
map_lgl(c(1L, 0L), identity)
and
map_lgl(c(1, 0), identity)
now succeed because 1/TRUE and
0/FALSE should be interchangeable.
map2()
, modify2()
, and
pmap()
now use tidyverse recycling rules where vectors of
length 1 are recycled to any size but all others must have the same
length (#878).
map2()
and pmap()
now recycle names of
their first input if needed (#783).
modify()
, modify_if()
, and
modify_at()
have been reimplemented using vctrs principles.
This shouldn’t have an user facing impact, but it does make the
implementation much simpler.
vec_depth()
is now pluck_depth()
and
works with more types of input (#818).
pluck()
now requires indices to be length 1 (#813).
It also now reports the correct type if you supply an unexpected
index.
pluck()
now accepts negative integers, indexing from
the right (#603).
pluck()
and chuck()
now fail if you
provide named inputs to … (#788).
pluck()
no longer replaces 0-length vectors with
default
; it now only applies absent and NULL
components (#480).
pluck<-
/assign_in()
can now modify
non-existing locations (#704).
pluck<-
/assign_in()
now sets
elements to NULL
rather than removing them (#636). Now use
the explicit zap()
if you want to remove elements.
modify()
, modify2()
, and
modify_if()
now correctly handle NULL
s in
replacement values (#655, #746, #753).
list_modify()
’s interface has been standardised.
Modifying with NULL
now always creates a NULL
in the output (#810)
list_
functionsNew list_assign()
which is similar to
list_modify()
but doesn’t work recursively (#822).
list_modify()
no longer recurses into data frames
(and other objects built on top of lists that are fundamentally non-list
like) (#810). You can revert to the previous behaviour by setting
.is_node = is.list
.
capture_output()
correctly uses
conditionMessage()
instead of directly interrogating the
message
field (#1010).
modify()
no longer works with calls or
pairlists.
modify_depth()
is no longer a generic. This makes it
more consistent with map_depth()
.
map_depth()
and modify_depth()
have a
new is_node
argument that allows you to control what counts
as a level. The default uses vec_is_list()
to avoid
recursing into rich S3 objects like linear models or data.frames (#958,
#920).
map_depth()
and modify_depth()
now
correctly recurse at depth 1.
as_mapper()
is now around twice as fast when used
with character, integer, or list (#820).
possibly()
now defaults otherwise
to
NULL.
modify_if(.else)
is now actually evaluated for
atomic vectors (@mgirlich, #701).
lmap_if()
correctly handles .else
functions (#847).
every()
now correctly propagates missing values
using the same rules as &&
(#751). Internally, it
has become a wrapper around &&
. This makes it
consistent with &&
and also with
some()
which has always been a wrapper around
||
with the same propagation rules.
every()
and some()
now properly check
the return value of their predicate function. It must now return a
TRUE
, FALSE
, or NA
.
Greatly improved performance of functions created with
partial()
(#715). Their invocation is now as fast as for
functions creating manually.
partial()
no longer inlines the function in the call
stack. This fixes issues when partial()
is used with
lm()
for instance (#707).
Fixed issue in list_modify()
that prevented lists
from being removed with zap()
(@adamroyjones, #777).
Added documentation for exporting functions created with purrr
adverb (@njtierney,
#668). See ?faq-adverbs-export
.
Added none()
, which tests that a predicate is false
for all elements (the opposite of every()
) (@AliciaSchep,
#735).
Maintenance release.
The documentation of map()
and its variants has been
improved by @surdina
as part of the Tidyverse Developer Day (@surdina, #671).
purrr now depends on R 3.2 or greater.
reduce()
now forces arguments (#643).
Fixed an issue in partial()
with generic functions
(#647).
negate()
now works with generic functions and
functions with early returns.
compose()
now works with generic functions again
(#629, #639). Its set of unit tests was expanded to cover many edge
cases.
prepend()
now works with empty lists (@czeildi, #637)
modify()
and variants are now wrapping
[[<-
instead of [<-
. This change
increases the genericity of these functions but might cause different
behaviour in some cases.
For instance, the [[<-
for data frames is stricter
than the [<-
method and might throw errors instead of
warnings. This is the case when assigning a longer vector than the
number of rows. [<-
truncates the vector with a warning,
[[<-
fails with an error (as is appropriate).
modify()
and variants now return the same type as
the input when the input is an atomic vector.
All functionals taking predicate functions (like
keep()
, detect()
, some()
) got
stricter. Predicate functions must now return a single TRUE
or FALSE
.
This change is meant to detect problems early with a more meaningful error message.
New chuck()
function. This is a strict variant of
pluck()
that throws errors when an element does not exist
instead of returning NULL
(@daniel-barnett, #482).
New assign_in()
and pluck<-
functions. They modify a data structure at an existing pluck
location.
New modify_in()
function to map a function at a
pluck location.
pluck()
now dispatches properly with S3 vectors. The
vector class must implement a length()
method for numeric
indexing and a names()
method for string indexing.
pluck()
now supports primitive functions
(#404).
New .else
argument for map_if()
and
modify_if()
. They take an alternative function that is
mapped over elements of the input for which the predicate function
returns FALSE
(#324).
reduce()
, reduce2()
,
accumulate()
, and accumulate2()
now terminate
early when the function returns a value wrapped with done()
(#253). When an empty done()
is returned, the value at the
last iteration is returned instead.
Functions taking predicates (map_if()
,
keep()
, some()
, every()
,
keep()
, etc) now fail with an informative message when the
return value is not TRUE
or FALSE
(#470).
This is a breaking change for every()
and
some()
which were documented to be more liberal in the
values they accepted as logical (any vector was considered
TRUE
if not a single FALSE
value, no matter
its length). These functions signal soft-deprecation warnings instead of
a hard failure.
Edit (purr 0.4.0): every()
and some()
never
issued deprecation warnings because of a technical issue. We didn’t fix
the warnings in the end, and using predicates returning NA
is no longer considered deprecated. If you need to use
every()
and some()
in contexts where
NA
propagation is unsafe, e.g. in if ()
conditions, make sure to use safe predicate functions like
is_true()
.
modify()
and variants are now implemented using
length()
, [[
, and [[<-
methods. This implementation should be compatible with most vector
classes.
New modify2()
and imodify()
functions.
These work like map()
and imap()
but preserve
the type of .x
in the return value.
pmap()
and pwalk()
now preserve class
for inputs of factor
, Date
,
POSIXct
and other atomic S3 classes with an appropriate
[[
method (#358, @mikmart).
modify()
, modify_if()
and
modify_at()
now preserve the class of atomic vectors
instead of promoting them to lists. New S3 methods are provided for
character, logical, double, and integer classes (@t-kalinowski, #417).
By popular request, at_depth()
has been brought back
as map_depth()
. Like modify_depth()
, it
applies a function at a specified level of a data structure. However, it
transforms all traversed vectors up to .depth
to bare lists
(#381).
map_at()
, modify_at()
and
lmap_at()
accept negative values for .at
,
ignoring elements at those positions.
map()
and modify()
now work with calls
and pairlists (#412).
modify_depth()
now modifies atomic leaves as well.
This makes modify_depth(x, 1, fn)
equivalent to
modify(x, fn)
(#359).
New accumulate2()
function which is to
accumulate()
what reduce2()
is to
reduce()
.
New rate_backoff()
and rate_delay()
functions to create rate objects. You can pass rates to
insistently()
, slowly()
, or the lower level
function rate_sleep()
. This will cause a function to wait
for a given amount of time with exponential backoff (increasingly larger
waiting times) or for a constant delay.
insistently(f)
modifies a function, f
,
so that it is repeatedly called until it succeeds (@richierocks, @ijlyttle).
slowly()
modifies a function so that it waits for a
given amount of time between calls.
partial()
The interface of partial()
has been simplified. It now
supports quasiquotation to control the timing of evaluation, and the
rlang::call_modify()
syntax to control the position of
partialised arguments.
partial()
now supports empty ... =
argument to specify the position of future arguments, relative to
partialised ones. This syntax is borrowed from (and implemented with)
rlang::call_modify()
.
To prevent partial matching of ...
on ...f
,
the latter has been renamed to .f
, which is more consistent
with other purrr function signatures.
partial()
now supports quasiquotation. When you
unquote an argument, it is evaluated only once at function creation
time. This is more flexible than the .lazy
argument since
you can control the timing of evaluation for each argument.
Consequently, .lazy
is soft-deprecated (#457).
Fixed an infinite loop when partialised function is given the same name as the original function (#387).
partial()
now calls as_closure()
on
primitive functions to ensure argument matching (#360).
The .lazy
argument of partial()
is
soft-deprecated in favour of quasiquotation:
# Before
partial(fn, u = runif(1), n = rnorm(1), .lazy = FALSE)
# After
partial(fn, u = !!runif(1), n = !!rnorm(1)) # All constant
partial(fn, u = !!runif(1), n = rnorm(1)) # First constant
The tibble package is now in Suggests rather than Imports. This brings the hard dependency of purrr to just rlang and magrittr.
compose()
now returns an identity function when
called without inputs.
Functions created with compose()
now have the same
formal parameters as the first function to be called. They also feature
a more informative print method that prints all composed functions in
turn (@egnha,
#366).
New .dir
argument in compose()
. When
set to "forward"
, the functions are composed from left to
right rather than right to left.
list_modify()
now supports the zap()
sentinel (reexported from rlang) to remove elements from lists.
Consequently, removing elements with the ambiguous sentinel
NULL
is soft-deprecated.
The requirements of list_modify()
and
list_merge()
have been relaxed. Previously it required both
the modified lists and the inputs to be either named or unnamed. This
restriction now only applies to inputs in ...
. When inputs
are all named, they are matched to the list by name. When they are all
unnamed, they are matched positionally. Otherwise, this is an
error.
Fixed ordering of names returned by
accumulate_right()
output. They now correspond to the order
of inputs.
Fixed names of accumulate()
output when
.init
is supplied.
compose()
now supports composition with lambdas
(@ColinFay,
#556)
Fixed a pmap()
crash with empty lists on the Win32
platform (#565).
modify_depth
now has .ragged
argument
evaluates correctly to TRUE
by default when
.depth < 0
(@cderv, #530).
accumulate()
now inherits names from their first
input (@AshesITR,
#446).
attr_getter()
no longer uses partial matching. For
example, if an x
object has a labels
attribute
but no label
attribute,
attr_getter("label")(x)
will no longer extract the
labels
attribute (#460, @huftis).
flatten_dfr()
and flatten_dfc()
now
aborts if dplyr is not installed. (#454)
imap_dfr()
now works with .id
argument
is provided (#429)
list_modify()
, update_list()
and
list_merge()
now handle duplicate duplicate argument names
correctly (#441, @mgirlich).
map_raw
, imap_raw
,
flatten_raw
, invoke_map_raw
,
map2_raw
and pmap_raw
added to support raw
vectors. (#455, @romainfrancois)
flatten()
now supports raw and complex
elements.
array_branch()
and array_tree()
now
retain the dimnames()
of the input array (#584, @flying-sheep)
pluck()
no longer flattens lists of arguments. You
can still do it manually with !!!
. This change is for
consistency with other dots-collecting functions of the
tidyverse.
map_at()
, lmap_at()
and
modify_at()
now supports selection using
vars()
and tidyselect
(@ColinFay, #608).
Note that for now you need to import vars()
from dplyr
or call it qualified like dplyr::vars()
. It will be
reexported from rlang in a future release.
detect()
now has a .default argument to specify the
value returned when nothing is detected (#622, @ColinFay).
.dir
argumentsWe have standardised the purrr API for reverse iteration with a
common .dir
argument.
reduce_right()
is soft-deprecated and replaced by a
new .dir
argument of reduce()
:
# Before:
reduce_right(1:3, f)
# After:
reduce(1:3, f, .dir = "backward")
Note that the details of the computation have changed. Whereas
reduce_right()
computed f(f(3, 2), 1)
, it now
computes f(1, f(2, 3))
. This is the standard way of
reducing from the right.
To produce the exact same reduction as reduce_right()
,
simply reverse your vector and use a left reduction:
# Before:
reduce_right(1:3, f)
# After:
reduce(rev(1:3), f)
reduce2_right()
is soft-deprecated without
replacement. It is not clear what algorithmic properties should a right
reduction have in this case. Please reach out if you know about a use
case for a right reduction with a ternary function.
accumulate_right()
is soft-deprecated and replaced
by the new .dir
argument of accumulate()
. Note
that the algorithm has slightly changed: the accumulated value is passed
to the right rather than the left, which is consistent with a right
reduction.
# Before:
accumulate_right(1:3, f)
# After:
accumulate(1:3, f, .dir = "backward")
The .right
argument of detect()
and
detect_index()
is soft-deprecated and renamed to
.dir
for consistency with other functions and clarity of
the interface.
# Before
detect(x, f, .right = TRUE)
# After
detect(x, f, .dir = "backward")
partial()
The interface of partial()
has been simplified (see more
about partial()
below):
The .lazy
argument of partial()
is
soft-deprecated in favour of quasiquotation.
We had to rename ...f
to .f
in
partial()
in order to support ... =
argument
(which would otherwise partial-match on ...f
). This also
makes partial()
more consistent with other purrr function
signatures.
invoke()
invoke()
and invoke_map()
are retired in
favour of exec()
. Note that retired functions are no longer
under active development, but continue to be maintained undefinitely in
the package.
invoke()
is retired in favour of the
exec()
function, reexported from rlang. exec()
evaluates a function call built from its inputs and supports tidy
dots:
# Before:
invoke(mean, list(na.rm = TRUE), x = 1:10)
# After
exec(mean, 1:10, !!!list(na.rm = TRUE))
Note that retired functions are not removed from the package and will be maintained undefinitely.
invoke_map()
is retired without replacement because
it is more complex to understand than the corresponding code using
map()
, map2()
and exec()
:
# Before:
invoke_map(fns, list(args))
invoke_map(fns, list(args1, args2))
# After:
map(fns, exec, !!!args)
map2(fns, list(args1, args2), function(fn, args) exec(fn, !!!args))
%@%
is soft-deprecated, please use the operator
exported in rlang instead. The latter features an interface more
consistent with @
as it uses NSE, supports S4 fields, and
has an assignment variant.
Removing elements from lists using NULL
in
list_modify()
is soft-deprecated. Please use the new
zap()
sentinel reexported from rlang instead:
# Before:
list_modify(x, foo = NULL)
# After:
list_modify(x, foo = zap())
This change is motivated by the ambiguity of NULL
as a
deletion sentinel because NULL
is also a valid value in
lists. In the future, NULL
will set an element to
NULL
rather than removing the element.
rerun()
is now in the questioning stage because we
are no longer convinced NSE functions are a good fit for purrr. Also,
rerun(n, x)
can just as easily be expressed as
map(1:n, ~ x)
(with the added benefit of being passed the
current index as argument to the lambda).
map_call()
is defunct.
We noticed the following issues during reverse dependencies checks:
If reduce()
fails with this message:
Error: `.x` is empty, and no `.init` supplied
, this is
because reduce()
now returns .init
when
.x
is empty. Fix the problem by supplying an appropriate
argument to .init
, or by providing special behaviour when
.x
has length 0.
The type predicates have been migrated to rlang. Consequently the
bare-type-predicates
documentation topic is no longer in
purrr, which might cause a warning if you cross-reference it.
purrr no longer depends on lazyeval or Rcpp (or dplyr, as of the previous version). This makes the dependency graph of the tidyverse simpler, and makes purrr more suitable as a dependency of lower-level packages.
There have also been two changes to eliminate name conflicts between purrr and dplyr:
order_by()
, sort_by()
and
split_by()
have been removed. order_by()
conflicted with dplyr::order_by()
and the complete family
doesn’t feel that useful. Use tibbles instead (#217).
contains()
has been renamed to
has_element()
to avoid conflicts with dplyr
(#217).
The plucking mechanism used for indexing into data structures with
map()
has been extracted into the function
pluck()
. Plucking is often more readable to extract an
element buried in a deep data structure. Compare this syntax-heavy
extraction which reads non-linearly:
accessor(x[[1]])$foo
to the equivalent pluck:
x %>% pluck(1, accessor, "foo")
as_function()
is now as_mapper()
because it is a tranformation that makes sense primarily for mapping
functions, not in general (#298). .null
has been renamed to
.default
to better reflect its intent (#298).
.default
is returned whenever an element is absent or empty
(#231, #254).
as_mapper()
sanitises primitive functions by
transforming them to closures with standardised argument names (using
rlang::as_closure()
). For instance +
is
transformed to function(.x, .y) .x + .y
. This results in
proper argument matching so that
map(1:10, partial(
-, .x = 5))
produces
list(5 - 1, 5 - 2, ...)
.
Recursive indexing can now extract objects out of environments (#213) and S4 objects (#200), as well as lists.
attr_getter()
makes it possible to extract from
attributes like
map(list(iris, mtcars), attr_getter("row.names"))
.
The argument list for formula-functions has been tweaked so that
you can refer to arguments by position with ..1
,
..2
, and so on. This makes it possible to use the formula
shorthand for functions with more than two arguments (#289).
possibly()
, safely()
and friends no
longer capture interrupts: this means that you can now terminate a
mapper using one of these with Escape or Ctrl + C (#314)
All map functions now treat NULL
the same way as an
empty vector (#199), and return an empty vector if any input is an empty
vector.
All map()
functions now force their arguments in the
same way that base R does for lapply()
(#191). This makes
map()
etc easier to use when generating functions.
A new family of “indexed” map functions, imap()
,
imap_lgl()
etc, provide a short-hand for
map2(x, names(x))
or map2(x, seq_along(x))
(#240).
The data frame suffix _df
has been (soft) deprecated
in favour of _dfr
to more clearly indicate that it’s a
row-bind. All variants now also have a _dfc
for column
binding (#167). (These will not be terribly useful until
dplyr::bind_rows()
/dplyr::bind_cols()
have
better semantics for vectors.)
A new modify()
family returns the same output of the
type as the input .x
. This is in contrast to the
map()
family which always returns a list, regardless of the
input type.
The modify functions are S3 generics. However their default methods
should be sufficient for most classes since they rely on the semantics
of [<-
. modify.default()
is thus a
shorthand for x[] <- map(x, f)
.
at_depth()
has been renamed to
modify_depth()
.
modify_depth()
gains new .ragged
argument, and negative depths are now computed relative to the deepest
component of the list (#236).
auto_browse(f)
returns a new function that
automatically calls browser()
if f
throws an
error (#281).
vec_depth()
computes the depth (i.e. the number of
levels of indexing) or a vector (#243).
reduce2()
and reduce2_right()
make it
possible to reduce with a 3 argument function where the first argument
is the accumulated value, the second argument is .x
, and
the third argument is .y
(#163).
list_modify()
extends
stats::modifyList()
to replace by position if the list is
not named.(#201). list_merge()
operates similarly to
list_modify()
but combines instead of replacing
(#322).
The legacy function update_list()
is basically a
version of list_modify
that evaluates formulas within the
list. It is likely to be deprecated in the future in favour of a
tidyeval interface such as a list method for
dplyr::mutate()
.
Thanks to @dchiu911, the unit test coverage of purrr is now much greater.
All predicate functions are re-exported from rlang (#124).
compact()
now works with standard mapper conventions
(#282).
cross_n()
has been renamed to cross()
.
The _n
suffix was removed for consistency with
pmap()
(originally called map_n()
at the start
of the project) and transpose()
(originally called
zip_n()
). Similarly, cross_d()
has been
renamed to cross_df()
for consistency with
map_df()
.
every()
and some()
now return
NA
if present in the input (#174).
invoke()
uses a more robust approach to generate the
argument list (#249) It no longer uses lazyeval to figure out which
enviroment a character f
comes from.
is_numeric()
and is_scalar_numeric()
are deprecated because they don’t test for what you might expect at
first sight.
reduce()
now throws an error if .x
is
empty and .init
is not supplied.
Deprecated functions flatmap()
, map3()
,
map_n()
, walk3()
, walk_n()
,
zip2()
, zip3()
, zip_n()
have been
removed.
pmap()
coerces data frames to lists to avoid the
expensive [.data.frame
which provides security that is
unneeded here (#220).
rdunif()
checks its inputs for validity
(#211).
set_names()
can now take a function to tranform the
names programmatically (#276), and you can supply names in
...
to reduce typing even more more (#316).
set_names()
is now powered by
rlang::set_names()
.
safely()
now actually uses the quiet
argument (#296).
transpose()
now matches by name if available (#164).
You can override the default choice with the new .names
argument.
The function argument of detect()
and
detect_index()
have been renamed from .p
to
.f
. This is because they have mapper semantics rather than
predicate semantics.
This is a compatibility release with dplyr 0.6.0.
dmap()
,
dmap_at()
, dmap_if()
,
invoke_rows()
, slice_rows()
,
map_rows()
, by_slice()
, by_row()
,
and unslice()
have been moved to purrrlyr. This is a bit of
an aggresive change but it allows us to make the dependencies much
lighter.Fix for dev tibble support.
as_function()
now supports list arguments which
allow recursive indexing using either names or positions. They now
always stop when encountering the first NULL (#173).
accumulate
and reduce
correctly pass
extra arguments to the worker function.
as_function()
gains a .null
argument
that for character and numeric values allows you to specify what to
return for null/absent elements (#110). This can be used with any map
function, e.g. map_int(x, 1, .null = NA)
as_function()
is now generic.
New is_function()
that returns TRUE
only for regular functions.
Fix crash on GCC triggered by
invoke_rows()
.
There are two handy infix functions:
x %||% y
is shorthand for
if (is.null(x)) y else x
(#109).x %@% "a"
is shorthand for
attr(x, "a", exact = TRUE)
(#69).accumulate()
has been added to handle recursive
folding. It is shortand for
Reduce(f, .x, accumulate = TRUE)
and follows a similar
syntax to reduce()
(#145). A right-hand version
accumulate_right()
was also added.
map_df()
row-binds output together. It’s the
equivalent of plyr::ldply()
(#127)
flatten()
is now type-stable and always returns a
list. To return a simpler vector, use flatten_lgl()
,
flatten_int()
, flatten_dbl()
,
flatten_chr()
, or flatten_df()
.
invoke()
has been overhauled to be more useful: it
now works similarly to map_call()
when .x
is
NULL, and hence map_call()
has been deprecated.
invoke_map()
is a vectorised complement to
invoke()
(#125), and comes with typed variants
invoke_map_lgl()
, invoke_map_int()
,
invoke_map_dbl()
, invoke_map_chr()
, and
invoke_map_df()
.
transpose()
replaces zip2()
,
zip3()
, and zip_n()
(#128). The name more
clearly reflects the intent (transposing the first and second levels of
list). It no longer has fields argument or the .simplify
argument; instead use the new simplify_all()
function.
safely()
, quietly()
, and
possibly()
are experimental functions for working with
functions with side-effects (e.g. printed output, messages, warnings,
and errors) (#120). safely()
is a version of
try()
that modifies a function (rather than an expression),
and always returns a list with two components, result
and
error
.
list_along()
and rep_along()
generalise
the idea of seq_along()
. (#122).
is_null()
is the snake-case version of
is.null()
.
pmap()
(parallel map) replaces map_n()
(#132), and has typed-variants suffixed pmap_lgl()
,
pmap_int()
, pmap_dbl()
,
pmap_chr()
, and pmap_df()
.
set_names()
is a snake-case alternative to
setNames()
with stricter equality checking, and more
convenient defaults for pipes: x %>% set_names()
is
equivalent to setNames(x, x)
(#119).
We are still figuring out what belongs in dplyr and what belongs in purrr. Expect much experimentation and many changes with these functions.
map()
now always returns a list. Data frame support
has been moved to map_df()
and dmap()
. The
latter supports sliced data frames as a shortcut for the combination of
by_slice()
and dmap()
:
x %>% by_slice(dmap, fun, .collate = "rows")
. The
conditional variants dmap_at()
and dmap_if()
also support sliced data frames and will recycle scalar results to the
slice size.
map_rows()
has been renamed to
invoke_rows()
. As other rows-based functionals, it collates
results inside lists by default, but with column collation this function
is equivalent to plyr::mdply()
.
The rows-based functionals gain a .to
option to name
the output column as well as a .collate
argument. The
latter allows to collate the output in lists (by default), on columns or
on rows. This makes these functions more flexible and more
predictable.
as_function()
, which converts formulas etc to
functions, is now exported (#123).
rerun()
is correctly scoped (#95)
update_list()
can now modify an element called
x
(#98).
map*()
now use custom C code, rather than relying on
lapply()
, mapply()
etc. The performance
characteristcs are very similar, but it allows us greater control over
the output (#118).
map_lgl()
now has second argument .f
,
not .p
(#134).
flatmap()
-> use map()
followed by
the appropriate flatten()
.
map_call()
-> invoke()
.
map_n()
-> pmap()
;
walk_n()
-> pwalk()
.
map3(x, y, z)
->
map_n(list(x, y, z))
;
walk3(x, y, z) ->
pwalk(list(x, y, z))`
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.