On 6/21/21 9:35 AM, Martin Maechler wrote:
Michael Chirico
on Sun, 20 Jun 2021 15:20:26 -0700 writes:
> Currently, substring defaults to last=1000000L, which
> strongly suggests the intent is to default to "nchar(x)"
> without having to compute/allocate that up front.
> Unfortunately, this default makes no sense for "very
> large" strings which may exceed 1000000L in "width".
Yes; and I tend to agree with you that this default is outdated
(Remember : R was written to work and run on 2 (or 4?) MB of RAM on the
student lab Macs in Auckland in ca 1994).
> The max width of a string is .Machine$integer.max-1:
(which Brodie showed was only almost true)
> So it seems to me either .Machine$integer.max or
> .Machine$integer.max-1L would be a more sensible default. Am I missing
> something?
The "drawback" is of course that .Machine$integer.max is still
a function call (as R beginners may forget) contrary to <nnnnn>L,
but that may even be inlined by the byte compiler (? how would we check ?)
and even if it's not, it does more clearly convey the concept
and idea *and* would probably even port automatically if ever
integer would be increased in R.
We still have the problem that we need to count characters, not bytes,
if we want the default semantics of "until the end of the string".
I think we would have to fix this either by really using
"nchar(type="c"))" or by using e.g. NULL and then treating this as a
special case, that would be probably faster.
Tomas
Martin
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