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.

rrapply: Revisiting Base Rapply

The minimal 'rrapply'-package contains a single function rrapply(), providing an extended implementation of 'R'-base rapply() by allowing to recursively apply a function to elements of a nested list based on a general condition function and including the possibility to prune or aggregate nested list elements from the result. In addition, special arguments can be supplied to access the name, location, parents and siblings in the nested list of the element under evaluation. The rrapply() function builds upon rapply()'s native 'C' implementation and requires no other package dependencies.

Version: 1.2.7
Depends: R (≥ 3.5)
Published: 2024-06-26
DOI: 10.32614/CRAN.package.rrapply
Author: Joris Chau [aut, cre]
Maintainer: Joris Chau <joris.chau at openanalytics.eu>
BugReports: https://github.com/JorisChau/rrapply/issues
License: LGPL-3
URL: https://jorischau.github.io/rrapply/, https://github.com/JorisChau/rrapply
NeedsCompilation: yes
Materials: NEWS
CRAN checks: rrapply results

Documentation:

Reference manual: rrapply.pdf
Vignettes: rrapply: cheat sheet

Downloads:

Package source: rrapply_1.2.7.tar.gz
Windows binaries: r-devel: rrapply_1.2.7.zip, r-release: rrapply_1.2.7.zip, r-oldrel: rrapply_1.2.7.zip
macOS binaries: r-release (arm64): rrapply_1.2.7.tgz, r-oldrel (arm64): rrapply_1.2.7.tgz, r-release (x86_64): rrapply_1.2.7.tgz, r-oldrel (x86_64): rrapply_1.2.7.tgz
Old sources: rrapply archive

Reverse dependencies:

Reverse imports: ANOFA, ANOPA, bartMan, df2yaml, JuliaFormulae, OnboardClient, otpr, potions, superb
Reverse suggests: segregation

Linking:

Please use the canonical form https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=rrapply to link to this page.

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.