delayedAssign | R Documentation |
delayedAssign
creates a promise to evaluate the given
expression if its value is requested. This provides direct access
to the lazy evaluation mechanism used by R for the evaluation
of (interpreted) functions.
delayedAssign(x, value, eval.env = parent.frame(1), assign.env = parent.frame(1))
x |
a variable name (given as a quoted string in the function call) |
value |
an expression to be assigned to |
eval.env |
an environment in which to evaluate |
assign.env |
an environment in which to assign |
Both eval.env
and assign.env
default to the currently active
environment.
The expression assigned to a promise by delayedAssign
will
not be evaluated until it is eventually ‘forced’. This happens when
the variable is first accessed.
When the promise is eventually forced, it is evaluated within the
environment specified by eval.env
(whose contents may have changed in
the meantime). After that, the value is fixed and the expression will
not be evaluated again.
This function is invoked for its side effect, which is assigning
a promise to evaluate value
to the variable x
.
substitute
, to see the expression associated with a
promise, if assign.env
is not the .GlobalEnv
.
msg <- "old" delayedAssign("x", msg) substitute(x) # shows only 'x', as it is in the global env. msg <- "new!" x # new! delayedAssign("x", { for(i in 1:3) cat("yippee!\n") 10 }) x^2 #- yippee x^2 #- simple number ne <- new.env() delayedAssign("x", pi + 2, assign.env = ne) ## See the promise {without "forcing" (i.e. evaluating) it}: substitute(x, ne) # 'pi + 2' ### Promises in an environment [for advanced users]: --------------------- e <- (function(x, y = 1, z) environment())(cos, "y", {cat(" HO!\n"); pi+2}) ## How can we look at all promises in an env (w/o forcing them)? gete <- function(e_) lapply(lapply(ls(e_), as.name), function(n) eval(substitute(substitute(X, e_), list(X=n)))) (exps <- gete(e)) sapply(exps, typeof) (le <- as.list(e)) # evaluates ("force"s) the promises stopifnot(identical(unname(le), lapply(exps, eval))) # and another "Ho!"
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