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wrapr is an R package that supplies powerful tools for writing and debugging R code.

Introduction

Primary wrapr services include:

library(wrapr)
packageVersion("wrapr")
 #  [1] '2.0.1'
date()
 #  [1] "Mon Aug 10 12:13:57 2020"

%.>% (dot pipe or dot arrow)

%.>% dot arrow pipe is a pipe with intended semantics:

a %.>% b” is to be treated approximately as if the user had written “{ . <- a; b };” with “%.>%” being treated as left-associative.

Other R pipes include magrittr and pipeR.

The following two expressions should be equivalent:

cos(exp(sin(4)))
 #  [1] 0.8919465

4 %.>% sin(.) %.>% exp(.) %.>% cos(.)
 #  [1] 0.8919465

The notation is quite powerful as it treats pipe stages as expression parameterized over the variable “.”. This means you do not need to introduce functions to express stages. The following is a valid dot-pipe:

1:4 %.>% .^2 
 #  [1]  1  4  9 16

The notation is also very regular as we show below.

1:4 %.>% sin
 #  [1]  0.8414710  0.9092974  0.1411200 -0.7568025
1:4 %.>% sin(.)
 #  [1]  0.8414710  0.9092974  0.1411200 -0.7568025
1:4 %.>% base::sin
 #  [1]  0.8414710  0.9092974  0.1411200 -0.7568025
1:4 %.>% base::sin(.)
 #  [1]  0.8414710  0.9092974  0.1411200 -0.7568025

1:4 %.>% function(x) { x + 1 }
 #  [1] 2 3 4 5
1:4 %.>% (function(x) { x + 1 })
 #  [1] 2 3 4 5

1:4 %.>% { .^2 } 
 #  [1]  1  4  9 16
1:4 %.>% ( .^2 )
 #  [1]  1  4  9 16

Regularity can be a big advantage in teaching and comprehension. Please see “In Praise of Syntactic Sugar” for more details. Some formal documentation can be found here.

Some obvious “dot-free”" right-hand sides are rejected. Pipelines are meant to move values through a sequence of transforms, and not just for side-effects. Example: 5 %.>% 6 deliberately stops as 6 is a right-hand side that obviously does not use its incoming value. This check is only applied to values, not functions on the right-hand side.

Trying to pipe into a an “zero argument function evaluation expression” such as sin() is prohibited as it looks too much like the user declaring sin() takes no arguments. One must pipe into either a function, function name, or an non-trivial expression (such as sin(.)). A useful error message is returned to the user: wrapr::pipe does not allow direct piping into a no-argument function call expression (such as "sin()" please use sin(.)).

Some reserved words can not be piped into. One example is 5 %.>% return(.) is prohibited as the obvious pipe implementation would not actually escape from user functions as users may intend.

Obvious de-references (such as $, ::, @, and a few more) on the right-hand side are treated performed (example: 5 %.>% base::sin(.)).

Outer parenthesis on the right-hand side are removed (example: 5 %.>% (sin(.))).

Anonymous function constructions are evaluated so the function can be applied (example: 5 %.>% function(x) {x+1} returns 6, just as 5 %.>% (function(x) {x+1})(.) does).

Checks and transforms are not performed on items inside braces (example: 5 %.>% { function(x) {x+1} } returns function(x) {x+1}, not 6).

The dot arrow pipe has S3/S4 dispatch (please see ). However as the right-hand side of the pipe is normally held unevaluated, we don’t know the type except in special cases (such as the rigth-hand side being referred to by a name or variable). To force the evaluation of a pipe term, simply wrap it in .().

The dot pipe is also user configurable through standard S3/S4 methods.

The dot pipe has been formally written up in the R Journal.

@article{RJ-2018-042,
  author = {John Mount and Nina Zumel},
  title = {{Dot-Pipe: an S3 Extensible Pipe for R}},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {{The R Journal}},
  url = {https://journal.r-project.org/archive/2018/RJ-2018-042/index.html}
}

unpack/to multiple assignments

Unpack a named list into the current environment by name (for a positional based multiple assignment operator please see zeallot, for another named base multiple assigment please see vadr::bind).

d <- data.frame(
  x = 1:9,
  group = c('train', 'calibrate', 'test'),
  stringsAsFactors = FALSE)

unpack[
  train_data = train,
  calibrate_data = calibrate,
  test_data = test
  ] := split(d, d$group)

knitr::kable(train_data)
xgroup
11train
44train
77train

as_named_list

Build up named lists. Very convenient for managing workspaces when used with used with unpack/to.

as_named_list(train_data, calibrate_data, test_data)
 #  $train_data
 #    x group
 #  1 1 train
 #  4 4 train
 #  7 7 train
 #  
 #  $calibrate_data
 #    x     group
 #  2 2 calibrate
 #  5 5 calibrate
 #  8 8 calibrate
 #  
 #  $test_data
 #    x group
 #  3 3  test
 #  6 6  test
 #  9 9  test

build_frame() / draw_frame()

build_frame() is a convenient way to type in a small example data.frame in natural row order. This can be very legible and saves having to perform a transpose in one’s head. draw_frame() is the complimentary function that formats a given data.frame (and is a great way to produce neatened examples).

x <- build_frame(
   "measure"                   , "training", "validation" |
   "minus binary cross entropy", 5         , -7           |
   "accuracy"                  , 0.8       , 0.6          )
print(x)
 #                       measure training validation
 #  1 minus binary cross entropy      5.0       -7.0
 #  2                   accuracy      0.8        0.6
str(x)
 #  'data.frame':   2 obs. of  3 variables:
 #   $ measure   : chr  "minus binary cross entropy" "accuracy"
 #   $ training  : num  5 0.8
 #   $ validation: num  -7 0.6
cat(draw_frame(x))
 #  x <- wrapr::build_frame(
 #     "measure"                     , "training", "validation" |
 #       "minus binary cross entropy", 5         , -7           |
 #       "accuracy"                  , 0.8       , 0.6          )

qc() (quoting concatenate)

qc() is a quoting variation on R’s concatenate operator c(). This code such as the following:

qc(a = x, b = y)
 #    a   b 
 #  "x" "y"

qc(one, two, three)
 #  [1] "one"   "two"   "three"

qc() also allows bquote() driven .()-style argument escaping.

aname <- "I_am_a"
yvalue <- "six"

qc(.(aname) := x, b = .(yvalue))
 #  I_am_a      b 
 #     "x"  "six"

Notice the := notation is required for syntacitic reasons.

:= (named map builder)

:= is the “named map builder”. It allows code such as the following:

'a' := 'x'
 #    a 
 #  "x"

The important property of named map builder is it accepts values on the left-hand side allowing the following:

name <- 'variableNameFromElsewhere'
name := 'newBinding'
 #  variableNameFromElsewhere 
 #               "newBinding"

A nice property is := commutes (in the sense of algebra or category theory) with R’s concatenation function c(). That is the following two statements are equivalent:

c('a', 'b') := c('x', 'y')
 #    a   b 
 #  "x" "y"

c('a' := 'x', 'b' := 'y')
 #    a   b 
 #  "x" "y"

The named map builder is designed to synergize with seplyr.

%?% (coalesce)

The coalesce operator tries to replace elements of its first argument with elements from its second argument. In particular %?% replaces NULL vectors and NULL/NA entries of vectors and lists.

Example:

c(1, NA) %?% list(NA, 20)
 #  [1]  1 20

%.|% (reduce/expand args)

x %.|% f stands for f(x[[1]], x[[2]], ..., x[[length(x)]]). v %|.% x also stands for f(x[[1]], x[[2]], ..., x[[length(x)]]). The two operators are the same, the variation just allowing the user to choose the order they write things. The mnemonic is: “data goes on the dot-side of the operator.”

args <- list('prefix_', c(1:3), '_suffix')

args %.|% paste0
 #  [1] "prefix_1_suffix" "prefix_2_suffix" "prefix_3_suffix"
# prefix_1_suffix" "prefix_2_suffix" "prefix_3_suffix"

paste0 %|.% args
 #  [1] "prefix_1_suffix" "prefix_2_suffix" "prefix_3_suffix"
# prefix_1_suffix" "prefix_2_suffix" "prefix_3_suffix"

DebugFnW()

DebugFnW() wraps a function for debugging. If the function throws an exception the execution context (function arguments, function name, and more) is captured and stored for the user. The function call can then be reconstituted, inspected and even re-run with a step-debugger. Please see our free debugging video series and vignette('DebugFnW', package='wrapr') for examples.

λ() (anonymous function builder)

λ() is a concise abstract function creator or “lambda abstraction”. It is a placeholder that allows the use of the -character for very concise function abstraction.

Example:

# Make sure lambda function builder is in our enironment.
wrapr::defineLambda()

# square numbers 1 through 4
sapply(1:4, λ(x, x^2))
 #  [1]  1  4  9 16

let()

let() allows execution of arbitrary code with substituted variable names (note this is subtly different than binding values for names as with base::substitute() or base::with()).

The function is simple and powerful. It treats strings as variable names and re-writes expressions as if you had used the denoted variables. For example the following block of code is equivalent to having written “a + a”.

a <- 7

let(
  c(VAR = 'a'),
  
  VAR + VAR
)
 #  [1] 14

This is useful in re-adapting non-standard evaluation interfaces (NSE interfaces) so one can script or program over them.

We are trying to make let() self teaching and self documenting (to the extent that makes sense). For example try the arguments “eval=FALSE” prevent execution and see what would have been executed, or debug=TRUE to have the replaced code printed in addition to being executed:

let(
  c(VAR = 'a'),
  eval = FALSE,
  {
    VAR + VAR
  }
)
 #  {
 #      a + a
 #  }

let(
  c(VAR = 'a'),
  debugPrint = TRUE,
  {
    VAR + VAR
  }
)
 #  $VAR
 #  [1] "a"
 #  
 #  {
 #      a + a
 #  }
 #  [1] 14

Please see vignette('let', package='wrapr') for more examples. Some formal documentation can be found here. wrapr::let() was inspired by gtools::strmacro() and base::bquote(), please see here for some notes on macro methods in R.

evalb()/si() (evaluate with bquote / string interpolation)

wrapr supplies unified notation for quasi-quotation and string interpolation.

angle = 1:10
variable <- "angle"

# execute code
evalb(
  plot(x = .(-variable), y = sin(.(-variable)))
)


# alter string
si("plot(x = .(variable), y = .(variable))")
 #  [1] "plot(x = \"angle\", y = \"angle\")"

The extra .(-x) form is a shortcut for .(as.name(x)).

sortv() (sort a data.frame by a set of columns)

This is the sort command that is missing from R: sort a data.frame by a chosen set of columns specified in a variable.

d <- data.frame(
  x = c(2, 2, 3, 3, 1, 1), 
  y = 6:1,
  z = 1:6)
order_cols <- c('x', 'y')

sortv(d, order_cols)
 #    x y z
 #  6 1 1 6
 #  5 1 2 5
 #  2 2 5 2
 #  1 2 6 1
 #  4 3 3 4
 #  3 3 4 3

Installation

Install with:

install.packages("wrapr")

More Information

More details on wrapr capabilities can be found in the following two technical articles:

Note

Note: wrapr is meant only for “tame names”, that is: variables and column names that are also valid simple (without quotes) R variables names.

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Version

Install

install.packages('wrapr')

Monthly Downloads

3,403

Version

2.0.2

License

GPL-2 | GPL-3

Issues

Pull Requests

Stars

Forks

Maintainer

John Mount

Last Published

August 10th, 2020

Functions in wrapr (2.0.2)

bquote_function

Adapt a function to use bquote on its arguments.
bquote_call_args

Treat ... argument as bquoted-values.
DebugFnW

Wrap a function for debugging.
clean_fit_glm

Fit a stats::glm without carying back large structures.
apply_left

S3 dispatch on class of pipe_left_arg.
apply_left.default

S3 dispatch on class of pipe_left_arg.
checkColsFormUniqueKeys

Check that a set of columns form unique keys.
DebugFnWE

Wrap function to capture arguments and environment of exception throwing function call for later debugging.
coalesce

Coalesce values (NULL/NA on left replaced by values on the right).
check_equiv_frames

Check two data.frames are equivilent after sorting columns and rows.
evalb

Near eval(bquote(expr)) shortcut.
draw_framec

Render a simple data.frame in qchar_frame format.
grepv

Return a vector of matches.
grepdf

Grep for column names from a data.frame
invert_perm

Invert a permutation.
clean_fit_lm

Fit a stats::lm without carying back large structures.
%qc%

Inline quoting list/array concatenate.
apply_left_default

S3 dispatch on class of pipe_left_arg.
defineLambda

Define lambda function building function.
UnpackerF

Create a value unpacking object (function version).
buildNameCallback

Build a custom writeback function that writes state into a user named variable.
UnpackerP

Create a value unpacking object (eager pipe version).
apply_right

S3 dispatch on class of pipe_right_argument.
build_frame

Build a data.frame from the user's description.
%<s%

Dot substitution string interpolation.
has_no_dup_rows

Check for duplicate rows.
let

Execute expr with name substitutions specified in alias.
%s>%

Dot substitution string interpolation.
makeFunction_se

Build an anonymous function.
execute_parallel

Execute f in parallel partitioned by partition_column.
apply_right_S4

S4 dispatch method for apply_right.
apply_right.default

Default apply_right implementation.
%dot%

Inline dot product.
%in_block%

Inline let-block notation.
grab_assignments_from_dots

Re-write captured ... arguments as assignments.
%c%

Inline list/array concatenate.
%p%

Inline character paste0.
map_to_char

format a map.
named_map_builder

Named map builder.
f.

Build an anonymous function of dot.
VectorizeM

Memoizing wrapper to base::Vectorize()
map_upper

Map up-cased symbol names to referenced values if those values are string scalars (else throw).
mapsyms

Map symbol names to referenced values if those values are string scalars (else throw).
qchar_frame

Build a quoted data.frame.
qe

Quote expressions.
orderv

Order by a list of vectors.
match_order

Match one order to another.
add_name_column

Add list name as a column to a list of data.frames.
reduceexpand

Use function to reduce or expand arguments.
parLapplyLBm

Memoizing wrapper for parLapplyLB
psagg

Pseudo aggregator.
partition_tables

Partition as set of tables into a list.
wrapr

wrapr: Wrap R Functions for Debugging and Parametric Programming
seqi

Increasing whole-number sequence.
si

Dot substitution string interpolation.
pipe_impl

Pipe dispatch implementation.
qs

Quote argument as a string.
restrictToNameAssignments

Restrict an alias mapping list to things that look like name assignments
as_named_list

Capture named objects as a named list.
sortv

Sort a data.frame.
unpack

Unpack or bind values by names into the calling environment.
sinterp

Dot substitution string interpolation.
uniques

Strict version of unique (without ...).
strsplit_capture

Split a string, keeping separator regions
[.Unpacker

Prepare for unpack or bind values into the calling environment.
dot_arrow

Pipe operator ("dot arrow", "dot pipe" or "dot arrow pipe").
lambda

Build an anonymous function.
draw_frame

Render a simple data.frame in build_frame format.
bquote_call

Treat call argument as bquoted-values.
returnCapture

Return an error to a file, environment (no names) or callback
stop_if_dot_args

Stop with message if dot_args is a non-trivial list.
vapplym

Memoizing wrapper for vapply.
split_at_brace_pairs

Split strings at -pairs.
view

Invoke a spreadsheet like viewer when appropriate.
lapplym

Memoizing wrapper for lapply.
mk_tmp_name_source

Produce a temp name generator with a given prefix.
qc

Quoting version of c() array concatenate.
mk_formula

Construct a formula.
qae

Quote assignment expressions (name = expr, name := expr, name %:=% expr).
run_wrapr_tests

Run wrapr package tests.
run_package_tests

Run package tests.
[<-.Unpacker

Unpack or bind values into the calling environment.
to

Unpack or bind values by names into the calling environment, eager eval (no-dot) variation.
DebugFnE

Capture arguments and environment of exception throwing function call for later debugging.
DebugPrintFn

Capture arguments of exception throwing function call for later debugging.
DebugFn

Capture arguments of exception throwing function call for later debugging.
DebugPrintFnE

Capture arguments and environment of exception throwing function call for later debugging.