# NOT RUN {
poke_vars(letters)
peek_vars()
# Now that the variables are registered, the helpers can figure out
# the locations of elements within the variable vector:
all_of(c("d", "z"))
# In a function be sure to restore the previous variables. An exit
# hook is the best way to do it:
fn <- function(vars) {
old <- poke_vars(vars)
on.exit(poke_vars(old))
all_of("d")
}
fn(letters)
fn(letters[3:5])
# The previous variables are still registered after fn() was
# called:
peek_vars()
# It is recommended to use the scoped variant as it restores the
# state automatically when the function returns:
fn <- function(vars) {
scoped_vars(vars)
starts_with("r")
}
fn(c("red", "blue", "rose"))
# The with_vars() helper makes it easy to pass an expression that
# should be evaluated in a variable context. Thanks to lazy
# evaluation, you can just pass the expression argument from your
# wrapper to with_vars():
fn <- function(expr) {
vars <- c("red", "blue", "rose")
with_vars(vars, expr)
}
fn(starts_with("r"))
# }
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab