peruse
The {peruse} package is aimed at making it easier to generate irregular sequences that are difficult to generate with existing tools.
The heart of {peruse} is the S3
class Iterator
. An Iterator
allows
the user to write an arbitrary R expression that returns the next
element of a sequence of R objects. It then saves the state of the
Iterator
, meaning the next time evaluation is invoked, the initial
state will be the result of the previous iteration. This is most useful
for generating recursive sequences, those where each iteration depends
on previous ones.
The package also provides a simple, tidy API for set building, allowing
the user to generate a set consisting of the elements of a vector that
meet specific criteria. This can either return a vector consisting of
all the chosen elements or it can return an Iterator
that lazily
generates the chosen elements.
At the end of this document, there is a tutorial for metaprogramming
(that is, programmatically generating code) with Iterator
s.
Installation
You can install the released version of peruse from CRAN with:
install.packages("peruse")
And the development version from GitHub with:
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("jacgoldsm/peruse")
Example
Negative Binomial Investigation
Suppose we want to investigate the question of how many trials it takes for a random walk with drift to reach a given threshold. We know that this would follow a Negative Binomial distribution, but how could we use the Iterator to look at this empirically in a way that easily allows us to adjust the drift term and see how the result changes? We might do something like this:
p_success <- 0.5
threshold <- 100
iter <- Iterator({
set.seed(seeds[.iter])
n <- n + sample(c(1,-1), 1, prob = c(p_success, 1 - p_success))
},
list(n = 0, seeds = 1000:1e5),
n)
sequence <- yield_while(iter, n <= threshold)
plot(sequence, main = "How many iterations does it take to get to 100?")
How would we apply this same function to a grid of probabilities? We could do something like this:
probs <- seq(0.5,0.95, by = 0.01)
num_iter <- rep(NA, length(probs))
threshold <- 20
seeds <- 1000:1e6
for (i in seq_along(probs)) {
iter <- Iterator({
set.seed(seeds[.iter])
n <- n + sample(c(1,-1), 1, prob = c(!! probs[i], 1 - !! probs[i]))
},
list(n = 0),
yield = n)
num_iter[i] <- length(yield_while(iter, n <= threshold))
}
plot(x = probs,
y = log(num_iter),
main = "Probability of Success vs How long it takes to get to 20 (Log Scale)",
xlab = "Probability of Success",
ylab = "Log Number of Iterations")
Alternatively, using functional programming:
make <- function(p) {
iter <- Iterator({
set.seed(seeds[.iter])
n <- n + sample(c(1,-1), 1, prob = c(!! p, 1 - !! p))
},
list(n = 0),
yield = n)
length(yield_while(iter, n <= threshold))
}
num_iter <- sapply(seq(0.5,0.95, by = 0.01), make)
This illustrates a few useful features of Iterators:
We can use environment variables in either our expression or our
while
condition to represent constants. In this case,threshold
doesn’t change between iterations or between parameters. If you are creating manyIterator
s, it can be faster to use environment variables, since you don’t have to make a new object for each newIterator
.We can use the forcing operators from
{rlang}
(!!
) to force evaluation of arguments in place, in this case substituting the expression ofprobs[i]
with the value ofprobs[i]
(see the end of this document for a tutorial on metaprogramming withIterator
s).We can refer to the current iteration number in
yield_while()
,yield_more()
, or their silent variants with the variable.iter
.
Collatz Sequence
A Collatz sequence is a particular sequence of natural numbers that
mathematicians think always reaches 1 at some point, no matter the
starting point. We can’t prove that one way or the other, but we can
create an Iterator
that lazily generates a Collatz sequence until it
reaches 1:
library(peruse)
# Collatz generator starting at 50
collatz <- Iterator({
if (n %% 2 == 0) n <- n / 2 else n <- n*3 + 1
},
initial = list(n = 50),
yield = n)
yield_while(collatz, n != 1L)
#> [1] 25 76 38 19 58 29 88 44 22 11 34 17 52 26 13 40 20 10 5 16 8 4 2 1
Random Walk with Drift
Random Walks, with or without drift, are one of the most commonly used type of stochastic processes. How can we simulate one with {peruse}?
rwd <- Iterator({
n <- n + sample(c(-1L, 1L), size = 1L, prob = c(0.25, 0.75))
},
initial = list(n = 0),
yield = n)
Value <- yield_while(rwd, n != 50L & n != -50L)
plot(Value, main = "The Value of the Iterator after a Given Number of Iterations")
Here, we can see that seq
gets to 50
after about 100
iterations
when it is weighted 3:1
odds in favor of adding 1
over adding -1
to the prior value.
A Note
Helper functions yield_more()
, yield_while()
, move_more()
, and
move_while()
behave mostly like syntactic sugar for explicit loops.
So,
it <- Iterator(x <- x + 1L, list(x = 0), x)
it2 <- clone(it)
x <- numeric(100)
for (i in 1:100) {
x[i] <- yield_next(it)
}
will give the same result as
y <- yield_more(it2, 100)
However, doing it the latter way is significantly more efficient than
the former. This is because a lot of the overhead only needs to be done
once per call to yield
. That means that a lot less has to be done on
every iteration when you explicitly call yield_more()
.
This is even more true with yield_while()
. Pretend we don’t know how
long this Iterator
will take to reach 10,000. Doing something like:
x <- numeric()
while (it$initial$x < 10000) {
x <- c(x, yield_next(it))
}
is very inefficient because it requires reallocating the vector on every iteration. On the other hand, the following is both easier to read and much more efficient:
y <- yield_while(it2, x < 10000)
Internally, yield_while()
uses an efficient algorithm for resizing the
result in linear amortized time. As a result, it will evaluate much
faster.
Primes
How about generating all the prime numbers between 1
and 100
? We can
easily do that with the set-builder API:
2:100 %>%
that_for_all(range(2, .x)) %>%
we_have(~.x %% .y)
#> [1] 2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47 53 59 61 67 71 73 79 83 89 97
In the equation, we can reference the left-hand side of the equation
with the positional variable .x
, and the right-hand side (that is, the
argument in that_for_all()
) with .y
. The equation can be anything
recognized as a function by rlang::as_function()
.
But how about if we want to generate the first 100 prime numbers? We don’t know the range of values this should fall in (well, mathematicians do), so we can use laziness to our advantage:
primes <- 2:10000 %>%
that_for_all(range(2, .x)) %>%
we_have(~.x %% .y, "Iterator")
primes_2 <- clone(primes)
The first prime number is
yield_next(primes_2)
#> [1] 2
And the first 100 are:
sequence <- yield_more(primes, 100)
sequence
#> [1] 2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47 53 59 61
#> [19] 67 71 73 79 83 89 97 101 103 107 109 113 127 131 137 139 149 151
#> [37] 157 163 167 173 179 181 191 193 197 199 211 223 227 229 233 239 241 251
#> [55] 257 263 269 271 277 281 283 293 307 311 313 317 331 337 347 349 353 359
#> [73] 367 373 379 383 389 397 401 409 419 421 431 433 439 443 449 457 461 463
#> [91] 467 479 487 491 499 503 509 521 523 541
Here, we use clone()
to create an identical Iterator
to primes
that can be modified separately.
clone()
also carries optional arguments that override the $initial
parameters in the old Iterator
. For example,
it <- Iterator({m <- m + n}, list(m = 0, n = 1), m)
it2 <- clone(it, n = 5)
yield_next(it)
#> [1] 1
yield_next(it2)
#> [1] 5
Here, we overrode n = 1
in it
with n = 5
in it2
.
Set Utilities
Iterator
s that are created from set comprehension have several
utilities:
Refer to the vector
.x
with the variable.x_vector
Refer to the current index of
.x_vector
with.i
(not to be confused with.iter
).
Here is an example of putting those together to yield to the end of the sequence:
primes_100 <- 2:100 %>%
that_for_all(range(2, .x)) %>%
we_have(~.x %% .y, "Iterator")
yield_while(primes_100, .x_vector[.i] <= 100)
#> (Note: result has reached end of sequence)
#> [1] 2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47 53 59 61 67 71 73 79 83 89 97
As you can see, the sequence terminates with a message that the end has been reached.
In reality, the sequence will terminate at the end anyway, so you can generate the whole sequence like this:
primes_100 <- 2:100 %>%
that_for_all(range(2, .x)) %>%
we_have(~.x %% .y, "Iterator")
yield_while(primes_100, T)
#> (Note: result has reached end of sequence)
#> [1] 2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47 53 59 61 67 71 73 79 83 89 97
Missing Values
Set comprehension does not specially handle missing values. All the
elements of set .x
will be compared with all the elements of set .y
by formula
, and the value of .x
will be included if and only if the
condition returns TRUE
. If the comparison returns NA
, the expression
will terminate with an error.
Be aware of two things: First, expressions like NA == NA
, NA > NA
,
and NA <= NA
return NA
. Second, expressions of the form
if (NA) action
are illegal and will result in an error.
As a result, an expression like this will not work:
c(2:20, NA_integer_) %>% that_for_all(range(2, .x)) %>% we_have(~ .x %% .y)
In fact, this will fail for two reasons: range(2, .x)
will not work
when .x
is NA
, and the comparison if (NA %% 2)
will also not work.
Normally, you will want to drop NA
values from your vectors before
using set comprehension. If you are careful, you can write valid code
with NA
s, but it will be very painful by comparison:
c(2:20, NA_integer_) %>%
that_for_all(if (is.na(.x)) NA else range(2, .x)) %>%
we_have(~ is.na(.x) || .x %% .y)
#> [1] 2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 NA
Here, we avoid range(2, NA)
with our conditional, and avoid having
NA
in the if
statement in we_have()
by making sure to return
TRUE
when .x
is missing.
Tutorial: Metaprogramming with Iterator
s
Iterator
s are designed to be flexible, almost as flexible as ordinary
R functions. They are also designed to be tidy, using tools from the
“Tidyverse” family of R extensions. Unfortunately, those goals are not
entirely compatible when it comes to metaprogramming, leading to a sort
of “semi-tidy” evaluation. Use these examples as a reference for
programmatically generating Iterator
expressions.
In almost all cases, the environment in which an Iterator is made does
not effect its execution; rather, the environment from which
yield_next()
or its cousins is called determines evaluation. In this
way, it is similar to ordinary R functions. The one small exception will
be detailed at the end.
Forcing
Use !!
to force evaluation of names, just like you would in dplyr
or
any Tidyverse function:
p <- 0.5
i <- Iterator({x <- x + !! p}, list(x = 0), x)
yield_more(i, 5)
#> [1] 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5
There is no built-in mechanism to force evaluation of names in the
$initial
list, but you can use tools like rlang::list2()
to do so.
$initial
can be anything coercible to list.
p <- 0.1
x <- as.symbol("my_var")
i <- Iterator({!! x <- !! x + !! p}, rlang::list2(!! x := 0), !! x)
yield_more(i, 5)
#> [1] 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5
Note the use of the “walrus” operator (:=
) to assign names in
rlang::list2()
, see the documentation in rlang::nse-force()
for more
details.
Force-defuse
Function arguments are a special data structure in R. They really
represent up to three different things: the name given to the argument
in the function, possibly the name of the argument when the function is
called if it is named, and the value of the argument passed to the
function. Since Iterator
s don’t use quosures (because they work
independently of the environment where they are created), you can’t use
{{ }}
to force-defuse expressions.
To get a variable name from a parameter name,
substitute()
the variable at the beginning.If you want the value of the variable, just leave it be.
Then use the bang-bang
(!!) operator to add all of them to the
Iterator
:
make_random_walk_with_drift <- function(drift, variable) {
variable <- substitute(variable) # creates a variable whose value is x
Iterator({
!! variable <- !! variable + sample(c(-1,1), 1, TRUE, c(!! drift, 1 - !! drift))
},
initial = rlang::list2(!! variable := 0), !! variable)
}
yield_more(make_random_walk_with_drift(0.5, x), 5)
#> [1] 1 2 1 0 -1
Indirection
Since Iterator
s don’t use data masks, they don’t have .data
and
.env
pronouns. If you have a variable in iter$initial
and a variable
with the same name in your global environment, just force immediate
evaluation of the environment variable with !!
.
One Exception
Ordinarily, Iterator
s work independently from the environment in which
they were created. The one exception is when an Iterator
is created
from the template,
iterator <- .x %>% expression_with_.x %>% we_have(formula, "Iterator")
the variable expression_with_.x
is turned into a quosure. That means
that it will always be evaluated in the environment where iterator
was
made.
For a concrete example, consider:
offset <- 2
it <- 2:100 %>% that_for_all(range(offset, .x)) %>% we_have(~ .x %% .y, "Iterator")
fun <- function() {
offset <- 3
yield_while(it, !.finished) # print the whole sequence
}
fun()
#> (Note: result has reached end of sequence)
#> [1] 2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47 53 59 61 67 71 73 79 83 89 97
We can see that the code does not select elements that are divisible by
2 but not any other numbers, as would be the case with offset equal to
three. Our expression range(offset, .x)
is evaluated in the global
environment, not in the execution environment of fun()
.
Citation
This software contains a modified version of a small piece of code from
the purrr
package, by Hadley Wickham, Lionel Henry, and RStudio,
freely available under the MIT License.