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The wrapr
R
package supplies a number of substantial programming tools, including the S3
/S4
compatible dot-pipe, unpack
/pack
object tools, and many more. It also supplies a number of formatting and parsing convenience tools:
qc()
(“quoting concatenate”): quotes strings, giving value-oriented interfaces much of the incidental convenience of non-standard evaluation (NSE) interfaces.- map_to_char(): prints maps and vectors as executable code..
let()
: allows proper value-oriented programming over non-standard evaluation (NSE) interfaces.
I am excited to share one more such convenience interface: bc()
(“blank concatenate”). bc()
takes a single string argument, parses it, and builds up a vector of the described values.
bc()
is easy to demonstrate.
library(wrapr) x <- 1 y <- 2 ls() # result not easy to paste back into R # [1] "x" "y" # the bc() fix bc('"x" "y"') # [1] "x" "y" # the map_to_char() fix map_to_char(ls()) # [1] "c('x', 'y')"
I myself find these solutions a bit more convenient than the usual dump()
, deparse()
, dput()
, eval()
, or parse()
.
bc()
requires the outer quotes, but not the internal quotes. That is: bc('x y')
and bc('x,y')
are also equivalent to c("x", "y")
.
And that is some of the tools that make using R
results and error messages to progress on projects by producing new R
code easier. These are small things, but they can help keep one in the flow when working with data. Also, a thank you to Emil Erik Pula Bellamy Begtrup-Bright for suggesting the new functionality.
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