Получить тип всех переменных
В R я хотел бы получить список глобальных переменных в конце моего script и перебрать их. Вот мой код
#declare a few sample variables
a<-10
b<-"Hello world"
c<-data.frame()
#get all global variables in script and iterate over them
myGlobals<-objects()
for(i in myGlobals){
print(typeof(i)) #prints 'character'
}
Моя проблема в том, что typeof(i)
всегда возвращает character
, хотя переменные a
и c
не являются символьными переменными. Как получить исходный тип переменной внутри цикла for?
Ответы
Ответ 1
Вам нужно использовать get
, чтобы получить значение, а не имя символа объекта, возвращаемое ls
:
x <- 1L
typeof(ls())
[1] "character"
typeof(get(ls()))
[1] "integer"
В качестве альтернативы для представленной проблемы вы можете использовать eapply
:
eapply(.GlobalEnv,typeof)
$x
[1] "integer"
$a
[1] "double"
$b
[1] "character"
$c
[1] "list"
Ответ 2
Как получить тип переменной, которую вы имеете:
Существует обертка вокруг возвращаемого значения object()
, которую нужно пропустить с помощью get(...)
, Пример:
a <- 10
myGlobals <- objects()
for(i in myGlobals){
typeof(i) #prints character
typeof(get(i)) #prints integer
}
R Как получить тип переменной, которую вы имеете:
#A variable type in R will shock and amaze you, lets start out
#pretending that the builtin function `typeof` is sufficient for our needs:
library(tibble)
#expression notes type
#----------------------- -------------------------------------- ----------
typeof(TRUE) #a single boolean: logical
typeof(1L) #a single numeric with L postfixed: integer
typeof("foobar") #A single string in double quotes: character
typeof(1) #a single numeric: double
typeof(list(5,6,7)) #a list of numeric: list
typeof(2i) #an imaginary number complex
#So far so good, but those who wish to keep their sanity go no further
typeof(5 + 5L) #double + integer is coerced: double
typeof(c()) #an empty vector has no type: NULL
typeof(!5) #a bang before a double: logical
typeof(Inf) #infinity has a type: double
typeof(c(5,6,7)) #a vector containing only doubles: double
typeof(c(c(TRUE))) #a vector of vector of logicals: logical
typeof(matrix(1:10)) #a matrix of doubles has a type: list
#Strangeness ahead, there be dragons: step carefully:
typeof(substr("abc",2,2))#a string at index 2 which is 'b' is: character
typeof(c(5L,6L,7L)) #a vector containing only integers: integer
typeof(c(NA,NA,NA)) #a vector containing only NA: logical
typeof(data.frame()) #a data.frame with nothing in it: list
typeof(data.frame(c(3))) #a data.frame with a double in it: list
typeof(c("foobar")) #a vector containing only strings: character
typeof(pi) #builtin expression for pi: double
#OK, I'm starting to get irritated, however, I am also longsuffering:
typeof(1.66) #a single numeric with mantissa: double
typeof(1.66L) #a double with L postfixed double
typeof(c("foobar")) #a vector containing only strings: character
typeof(c(5L, 6L)) #a vector containing only integers: integer
typeof(c(1.5, 2.5)) #a vector containing only doubles: double
typeof(c(1.5, 2.5)) #a vector containing only doubles: double
typeof(c(TRUE, FALSE)) #a vector containing only logicals: logical
#R is really cramping my style, killing my high, irritation is increasing:
typeof(factor()) #an empty factor has default type: integer
typeof(factor(3.14)) #a factor containing doubles: integer
typeof(factor(T, F)) #a factor containing logicals: integer
typeof(Sys.Date()) #builtin R dates: double
typeof(hms::hms(3600)) #hour minute second timestamp double
typeof(c(T, F)) #T and F are builtins: logical
typeof(1:10) #a builtin sequence of numerics: integer
typeof(NA) #The builtin value not available: logical
#The R coolaid punchbowl has been spiked: stay frosty and keep your head low:
typeof(c(list(T))) #a vector of lists of logical: list
typeof(list(c(T))) #a list of vectors of logical: list
typeof(c(T, 3.14)) #a vector of logicals and doubles: double
typeof(c(3.14, "foo")) #a vector of doubles and characters: character
typeof(c("foo",list(T))) #a vector of strings and lists: list
typeof(list("foo",c(T))) #a list of strings and vectors: list
typeof(TRUE + 5L) #a logical plus an integer: integer
typeof(c(TRUE, 5L)[1]) #The true is coerced to 1 integer
typeof(c(c(2i), TRUE)[1])#logical coerced to complex: complex
typeof(c(NaN, 'batman')) #NaN in a vector don't dominate: character
typeof(5 && 4) #doubles are coerced by order of && logical
typeof(8 < 'foobar') #string and double is coerced logical
typeof(list(4, T)[[1]]) #a list retains type at every index: double
typeof(list(4, T)[[2]]) #a list retains type at every index: logical
typeof(2 ** 5) #result of exponentiation double
typeof(0E0) #exponential lol notation double
typeof(0x3fade) #hexidecimal double
typeof(paste(3, '3')) #paste promotes types to string character
typeof(3 + 四) #R pukes on unicode error
typeof(iconv("a", "latin1", "UTF-8")) #UTF-8 characters character
typeof(5 == 5) #result of a comparison: logical
R получает переменную класс:
#variable classes are similar but different to their types:
library(tibble)
#expression notes class
#--------------------- ---------------------------------------- ---------
class(matrix(1:10)) #a matrix of doubles has a class: matrix
class(factor("hi")) #factor of items is: factor
class(TRUE) #a single boolean: logical
class(1L) #a single numeric with L postfixed: integer
class("foobar") #A single string in double quotes: character
class(1) #a single numeric: numeric
class(list(5,6,7)) #a list of numeric: list
class(2i) #an imaginary complex
class(data.frame()) #a data.frame with nothing in it: data.frame
class(Sys.Date()) #builtin R dates: Date
class(sapply) #a function is function
class(charToRaw("hi")) #convert string to raw: raw
class(array("hi")) #array of items is: array
#So far so good, but those who wish to keep their sanity go no further
class(5 + 5L) #double + integer is coerced: numeric
class(c()) #an empty vector has no class: NULL
class(!5) #a bang before a double: logical
class(Inf) #infinity has a class: numeric
class(c(5,6,7)) #a vector containing only doubles: numeric
class(c(c(TRUE))) #a vector of vector of logicals: logical
#Strangeness ahead, there be dragons: step carefully:
class(substr("abc",2,2))#a string at index 2 which is 'b' is: character
class(c(5L,6L,7L)) #a vector containing only integers: integer
class(c(NA,NA,NA)) #a vector containing only NA: logical
class(data.frame(c(3))) #a data.frame with a double in it: data.frame
class(c("foobar")) #a vector containing only strings: character
class(pi) #builtin expression for pi: numeric
#OK, I'm starting to get irritated, however, I am also longsuffering:
class(1.66) #a single numeric with mantissa: numeric
class(1.66L) #a double with L postfixed numeric
class(c("foobar")) #a vector containing only strings: character
class(c(5L, 6L)) #a vector containing only integers: integer
class(c(1.5, 2.5)) #a vector containing only doubles: numeric
class(c(TRUE, FALSE)) #a vector containing only logicals: logical
#R is really cramping my style, killing my high, irritation is increasing:
class(factor()) #an empty factor has default class: factor
class(factor(3.14)) #a factor containing doubles: factor
class(factor(T, F)) #a factor containing logicals: factor
class(hms::hms(3600)) #hour minute second timestamp hms difftime
class(c(T, F)) #T and F are builtins: logical
class(1:10) #a builtin sequence of numerics: integer
class(NA) #The builtin value not available: logical
#The R coolaid punchbowl has been spiked: stay frosty and keep your head low:
class(c(list(T))) #a vector of lists of logical: list
class(list(c(T))) #a list of vectors of logical: list
class(c(T, 3.14)) #a vector of logicals and doubles: numeric
class(c(3.14, "foo")) #a vector of doubles and characters: character
class(c("foo",list(T))) #a vector of strings and lists: list
class(list("foo",c(T))) #a list of strings and vectors: list
class(TRUE + 5L) #a logical plus an integer: integer
class(c(TRUE, 5L)[1]) #The true is coerced to 1 integer
class(c(c(2i), TRUE)[1])#logical coerced to complex: complex
class(c(NaN, 'batman')) #NaN in a vector don't dominate: character
class(5 && 4) #doubles are coerced by order of && logical
class(8 < 'foobar') #string and double is coerced logical
class(list(4, T)[[1]]) #a list retains class at every index: numeric
class(list(4, T)[[2]]) #a list retains class at every index: logical
class(2 ** 5) #result of exponentiation numeric
class(0E0) #exponential lol notation numeric
class(0x3fade) #hexidecimal numeric
class(paste(3, '3')) #paste promotes class to string character
class(3 + 四) #R pukes on unicode error
class(iconv("a", "latin1", "UTF-8")) #UTF-8 characters character
class(5 == 5) #result of a comparison: logical
для ответа на уровень исходного кода "Как работает R-ввод", см. https://stat.ethz.ch/R-manual/R-devel/library/base/html/typeof.html
Ответ 3
Разработанный, чтобы сделать по существу инверсию того, что вы хотели, вот одна из моих игрушек-инструментов:
lstype<-function(type='closure'){
inlist<-ls(.GlobalEnv)
if (type=='function') type <-'closure'
typelist<-sapply(sapply(inlist,get),typeof)
return(names(typelist[typelist==type]))
}
Ответ 4
Вы можете использовать класс (x) для проверки типа переменной. Если необходимо проверить все типы переменных в кадре данных, тогда можно использовать sapply (x, class).