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R.oo (version 1.2.7)

extend: Extends a object

Description

Simply speaking this method "extends" the class of an object. What is actually happening is that it creates an instance of class name ...className, by taking another object and add ...className to the class list and also add all the named values in ... as attributes. The method should be used by the constructor of a class and nowhere else.

Usage

## S3 method for class 'default}(this, ...className, ...)':
extendundefined

this{Object to be extended.}
  ...className{The name of new class.}
  ...{Attribute fields of the new class.}

Returns an object of class ...className.

[object Object]

setConstructorS3("MyDouble", function(value=0, ...) {
  extend(as.double(value), "MyDouble", ...)
})

setMethodS3("as.character", "MyDouble", function(object, ...) {
  fmtstr <- attr(object, "fmtstr")
  if (is.null(fmtstr))
    fmtstr <- "%.6f"
  sprintf(fmtstr, object)
})

setMethodS3("print", "MyDouble", function(object, ...) {
  print(as.character(object), ...)
})

x <- MyDouble(3.1415926)
print(x)

x <- MyDouble(3.1415926, fmtstr="%3.2f")
print(x)
attr(x, "fmtstr") <- "%e"
print(x)






setConstructorS3("MyList", function(value=0, ...) {
  extend(list(value=value, ...), "MyList")
})

setMethodS3("as.character", "MyList", function(object, ...) {
  fmtstr <- object$fmtstr
  if (is.null(fmtstr))
    fmtstr <- "%.6f"
  sprintf(fmtstr, object$value)
})

setMethodS3("print", "MyList", function(object, ...) {
  print(as.character(object), ...)
})

x <- MyList(3.1415926)
print(x)
x <- MyList(3.1415926, fmtstr="%3.2f")
print(x)
x$fmtstr <- "%e"
print(x)

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