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purrr (version 0.2.3)

invoke: Invoke functions.

Description

This pair of functions make it easier to combine a function and list of parameters to get a result. invoke is a wrapper around do.call that makes it easy to use in a pipe. invoke_map makes it easier to call lists of functions with lists of parameters.

Usage

invoke(.f, .x = NULL, ..., .env = NULL)

invoke_map(.f, .x = list(NULL), ..., .env = NULL)

invoke_map_lgl(.f, .x = list(NULL), ..., .env = NULL)

invoke_map_int(.f, .x = list(NULL), ..., .env = NULL)

invoke_map_dbl(.f, .x = list(NULL), ..., .env = NULL)

invoke_map_chr(.f, .x = list(NULL), ..., .env = NULL)

invoke_map_dfr(.f, .x = list(NULL), ..., .env = NULL)

invoke_map_dfc(.f, .x = list(NULL), ..., .env = NULL)

Arguments

.f

For invoke, a function; for invoke_map a list of functions.

.x

For invoke, an argument-list; for invoke_map a list of argument-lists the same length as .f (or length 1). The default argument, list(NULL), will be recycled to the same length as .f, and will call each function with no arguments (apart from any supplied in ....

...

Additional arguments passed to each function.

.env

Environment in which do.call() should evaluate a constructed expression. This only matters if you pass as .f the name of a function rather than its value, or as .x symbols of objects rather than their values.

See Also

Other map variants: imap, lmap, map2, map, modify

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
# Invoke a function with a list of arguments
invoke(runif, list(n = 10))
# Invoke a function with named arguments
invoke(runif, n = 10)

# Combine the two:
invoke(paste, list("01a", "01b"), sep = "-")
# That's more natural as part of a pipeline:
list("01a", "01b") %>%
  invoke(paste, ., sep = "-")

# Invoke a list of functions, each with different arguments
invoke_map(list(runif, rnorm), list(list(n = 10), list(n = 5)))
# Or with the same inputs:
invoke_map(list(runif, rnorm), list(list(n = 5)))
invoke_map(list(runif, rnorm), n = 5)
# Or the same function with different inputs:
invoke_map("runif", list(list(n = 5), list(n = 10)))

# Or as a pipeline
list(m1 = mean, m2 = median) %>% invoke_map(x = rcauchy(100))
list(m1 = mean, m2 = median) %>% invoke_map_dbl(x = rcauchy(100))

# Note that you can also match by position by explicitly omitting `.x`.
# This can be useful when the argument names of the functions are not
# identical
list(m1 = mean, m2 = median) %>%
  invoke_map(, rcauchy(100))

# If you have pairs of function name and arguments, it's natural
# to store them in a data frame. Here we use a tibble because
# it has better support for list-columns
df <- tibble::tibble(
  f = c("runif", "rpois", "rnorm"),
  params = list(
    list(n = 10),
    list(n = 5, lambda = 10),
    list(n = 10, mean = -3, sd = 10)
  )
)
df
invoke_map(df$f, df$params)
# }

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