On 25/10/2007 5:38 PM, Andrew Smith wrote: > Here's a simple example of the type of function I'm trying to write, > where the first argument is a list of functions: > > myfun <- function(funlist, vec){ > tmp <- lapply(funlist, function(x)do.call(x, args = list(vec))) > names(tmp) <- names(funlist) > tmp > } > >> myfun(list("Summation" = sum, prod, "Absolute value" = abs), c(1, 4, 6, 7)) > $Summation > [1] 18 > > [[2]] > [1] 168 > > $`Absolute value` > [1] 1 4 6 7 > > > What I would like is for the names of the result to be the same as the > names of funlist (as is the case in components 1 and 3 above), but if > some components of funlist are unnamed, I would like the default name > in the result to be the name of the actual function used. So in the > above example, I want the name of the second component to default to > 'prod', since funlist[[2]] has no name. > > But the problem is that I can't get the function names corresponding > to the unnamed elements of funlist by using the usual > deparse(substitute)) trick, since they're part of a list which is > treated as one big argument. So deparse(substitute(funlist)) just > gives me one big character string of all the functions, and I'm not > sure how I can use that to get just the functions that aren't named. > Any ideas?
I wouldn't do this, but you could use substitute to get the funlist argument to myfun. It will be an expression which would deparse to list("Summation" = sum, prod, "Absolute value" = abs), but you could probably futz around and decompose it into its component parts. But is this really worth it? Duncan Murdoch ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.