RcppParams
is a C++ class defined in Rcpp.h
that receive
any number of scalar parameters of types in a single named list object
from R through the .Call()
function.
The parameters can be of different types that are limited to the R
types numeric
, integer
, character
, logical
or Date
. These types are mapped into, respectively, the
corresponding C++ types double
, int
, string
,
bool
and Date
(a custom class defined by Rcpp
.
RcppParams
is part of the old deprecated Rcpp API, and should
be replaces by Rcpp::List
which is more flexible and can be
used for both inputs and outputs. RcppParams
is retained for
backwards compatibility, but should be avoided in new projects and
replaced in old projects.
Note that the RcppClassic package has been deprecated since 2010, all new development should use the Rcpp package instead.
RcppExample
returns a list containing:
string input paramter
double input paramter
int input parameter
Date type with starting date
input parameter list (this is redundant because we returned the input parameters above)
A heterogeneous list specifying method
(string),
tolerance
(double), maxIter
(int) and startDate
(Date in R, RcppDate in C++).
Dominick Samperi wrote the initial versions of Rcpp (and RcppTemplate) during 2005 and 2006. Dirk Eddelbuettel made some additions, and became maintainer in 2008. Dirk Eddelbuettel and Romain Francois have been extending Rcpp since 2009.
Usage of RcppParams
from R via .Call()
is as follows:
# an R example passing one type of each class to a function
# someFunction in package somePackage
val <- .Call("someFunction",
list(pie=3.1415, magicanswer=42, sometext="foo",
yesno=true, today=Sys.date()),
PACKAGE="somePackage")
At the C++ level, the corresponding code to assign these parameter to C++ objects is
SEXP someFunction(SEXP params) {
RcppParams par(params);
double p = par.getDoubleValue("pie");
int magic = par.getIntValue("magicanswer");
string txt = par.getStringValue("sometext");
bool yn = par.getBoolValue("yesno");
RcppDate d = par.getDateValue("today");
// some calculations ...
// some return values ...
}
As the lookup is driven by the names givem at the R level, order is not important. It is however important that the types match. Errors are typically caught and an exception is thrown.
The class member function checkNames
can be used to verify that the
SEXP
object passed to the function contains a given set of
named object.
Writing R Extensions, available at https://www.r-project.org.
RcppExample
.
See the RcppExamples-package for examples of the recommended Rcpp API and Rcpp-package for documentation on the recommended API to extend R with C++ code, while the deprecated RcppClassic-package documents the older, deprecated API.
# set up some value
params <- list(method='BFGS',
tolerance=1.0e-5,
maxIter=100,
startDate=as.Date('2006-7-15'))
# call the underlying C++ function
result <- RcppParamsExample(params)
# inspect returned object
result
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