问题
My question might sound stupid but I have noticed that . and % is often used in R and to be frank I don't really know why it is used.
I have seen it in dplyr (go here for an example) and data.table (i.e. .SD) but I am sure it must be used in other place as well.
Therefore, my question is:
- What does
.mean? Is it some kind ofRcoding best practice nomenclature? (i.e._functionNameis often used injavascriptto indicate it is a private function). If yes, what's the rule? - Same question for
%, which is also often used in R (i.e.%in%,%>%,...).
My guess always has been that . and % are a convenient way to quickly call function but the way data.table uses . does not follow this logic, which confuses me.
回答1:
. has no inherent/magical meaning in R. It's just another character that you can use in symbol names. But because it is so convenient to type, it has been given special meaning by certain functions and conventions in R. Here are just a few
.is used look up S3 generic method implementations. For example, if you call a generic function likeplotwith an object of classlmas the first parameter, then it will look for a function namedplot.lmand, if found, call that.- often
.in formulas means "all other variables", for examplelm(y~., data=dd)will regressyon all the other variables in the data.framedd. - libraries like
dplyruse it as a special variable name to indicate the current data.frame for methods likedo(). They could just as easily have chosen to use the variable nameXinstead - functions like
bquoteuse.()as a special function to escape variables in expressions - variables that start with a period are considered "hidden" and will not show up with
ls()unless you callls(all.names=TRUE)(similar to the UNIX file system behavior)
However, you can also just define a variable named my.awesome.variable<-42 and it will work just like any other variable.
A % by itself doesn't mean anything special, but R allows you to define your own infix operators in the form %<something>% using two percent signs. If you define
`%myfun%` <- function(a,b) {
a*3-b*2
}
you can call it like
5 %myfun% 2
# [1] 11
回答2:
MrFlick's answer doesn't cover the usage of . in data.table;
In data.table, . is (essentially) an alias for list, so any* call to [.data.table that accepts a list can also be passed an object wrapped in .().
So the following are equivalent:
DT[ , .(x, y)]
DT[ , list(x, y)]
*well, not quite. any use in the j argument, yes; elsewhere is a work in progress, see here.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27560450/what-do-dot-and-percentage-mean-in-r