From e542a576c8e0c48ea4b367eb618e6b884f7833f1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nicolau Manubens Date: Tue, 15 Jan 2019 19:21:47 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Added support for all types. --- DESCRIPTION | 2 +- R/Apply.R | 12 ++++++------ 2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) diff --git a/DESCRIPTION b/DESCRIPTION index b49b7f5..3a5505b 100644 --- a/DESCRIPTION +++ b/DESCRIPTION @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ Description: The base apply function and its variants, as well as the related single argument (or a list of vectorized arguments in the case of mapply). The 'multiApply' package extends this paradigm with its only function, Apply, which efficiently applies functions taking one or a list of multiple unidimensional - or multidimensional numeric arrays (or combinations thereof) as input. The input + or multidimensional arrays (or combinations thereof) as input. The input arrays can have different numbers of dimensions as well as different dimension lengths, and the applied function can return one or a list of unidimensional or multidimensional arrays as output. This saves development time by preventing the diff --git a/R/Apply.R b/R/Apply.R index e130e90..b4a75d1 100644 --- a/R/Apply.R +++ b/R/Apply.R @@ -1,10 +1,10 @@ #' Apply Functions to Multiple Multidimensional Arrays or Vectors #' -#' This function efficiently applies a given function, which takes N vectors or multi-dimensional arrays as inputs (which may have different numbers of dimensions and dimension lengths), and applies it to a list of N vectors or multi-dimensional arrays with at least as many dimensions as expected by the given function. The user can specify which dimensions of each array the function is to be applied over with the \code{margins} or \code{target_dims} parameters. The function to be applied can receive other helper parameters and return any number of numeric vectors or multidimensional arrays. The target dimensions or margins can be specified by their names, as long as the inputs are provided with dimension names (recommended). This function can also use multi-core in a transparent way if requested via the \code{ncores} parameter.\cr\cr The following steps help to understand how \code{Apply} works:\cr\cr - The function receives N arrays with Dn dimensions each.\cr - The user specifies, for each of the arrays, which of its dimensions are 'target' dimensions (dimensions which the function provided in 'fun' operates with) and which are 'margins' (dimensions to be looped over).\cr - \code{Apply} will generate an array with as many dimensions as margins in all of the input arrays. If a margin is repeated across different inputs, it will appear only once in the resulting array.\cr - For each element of this resulting array, the function provided in the parameter'fun' is applied to the corresponding sub-arrays in 'data'.\cr - If the function returns a vector or a multidimensional array, the additional dimensions will be prepended to the resulting array (in left-most positions).\cr - If the provided function returns more than one vector or array, the process above is carried out for each of the outputs, resulting in a list with multiple arrays, each with the combination of all target dimensions (at the right-most positions) and resulting dimensions (at the left-most positions). +#' This function efficiently applies a given function, which takes N vectors or multi-dimensional arrays as inputs (which may have different numbers of dimensions and dimension lengths), and applies it to a list of N vectors or multi-dimensional arrays with at least as many dimensions as expected by the given function. The user can specify which dimensions of each array the function is to be applied over with the \code{margins} or \code{target_dims} parameters. The function to be applied can receive other helper parameters and return any number of vectors or multidimensional arrays. The target dimensions or margins can be specified by their names, as long as the inputs are provided with dimension names (recommended). This function can also use multi-core in a transparent way if requested via the \code{ncores} parameter.\cr\cr The following steps help to understand how \code{Apply} works:\cr\cr - The function receives N arrays with Dn dimensions each.\cr - The user specifies, for each of the arrays, which of its dimensions are 'target' dimensions (dimensions which the function provided in 'fun' operates with) and which are 'margins' (dimensions to be looped over).\cr - \code{Apply} will generate an array with as many dimensions as margins in all of the input arrays. If a margin is repeated across different inputs, it will appear only once in the resulting array.\cr - For each element of this resulting array, the function provided in the parameter'fun' is applied to the corresponding sub-arrays in 'data'.\cr - If the function returns a vector or a multidimensional array, the additional dimensions will be prepended to the resulting array (in left-most positions).\cr - If the provided function returns more than one vector or array, the process above is carried out for each of the outputs, resulting in a list with multiple arrays, each with the combination of all target dimensions (at the right-most positions) and resulting dimensions (at the left-most positions). #' -#' @param data One or a list of numeric object (vector, matrix or array). They must be in the same order as expected by the function provided in the parameter 'fun'. The dimensions do not necessarily have to be ordered. If the 'target_dims' require a different order than the provided, \code{Apply} will automatically reorder the dimensions as needed. +#' @param data One or a list of vectors, matrices or arrays. They must be in the same order as expected by the function provided in the parameter 'fun'. The dimensions do not necessarily have to be ordered. If the 'target_dims' require a different order than the provided, \code{Apply} will automatically reorder the dimensions as needed. #' @param target_dims One or a list of vectors (or NULLs) containing the dimensions to be input into fun for each of the objects in the data. If a single vector of target dimensions is specified and multiple inputs are provided in 'data, then the single set of target dimensions is re-used for all of the inputs. These vectors can contain either integers specifying the position of the dimensions, or character strings corresponding to the dimension names. This parameter is mandatory if 'margins' are not specified. If both 'margins' and 'target_dims' are specified, 'margins' takes priority. -#' @param fun Function to be applied to the arrays. Must receive as many inputs as provided in 'data', each with as many dimensions as specified in 'target_dims' or as the total number of dimensions in 'data' minus the ones specified in 'margins'. The function can receive other additional fixed parameters (see parameter '...' of \code{Apply}). The function can return one or a list of numeric vectors or multidimensional arrays, optionally with dimension names which will be propagated to the final result. The returned list can optionally be named, with a name for each output, which will be propagated to the resulting array. The function can optionally be provided with the attributes 'target_dims' and 'output_dims'. In that case, the corresponding parameters of \code{Apply} do not need to be provided. The function can expect named dimensions for each of its inputs, in the same order as specified in 'target_dims' or, if no 'target_dims' have been provided, in the same order as provided in 'data'. +#' @param fun Function to be applied to the arrays. Must receive as many inputs as provided in 'data', each with as many dimensions as specified in 'target_dims' or as the total number of dimensions in 'data' minus the ones specified in 'margins'. The function can receive other additional fixed parameters (see parameter '...' of \code{Apply}). The function can return one or a list of vectors or multidimensional arrays, optionally with dimension names which will be propagated to the final result. The returned list can optionally be named, with a name for each output, which will be propagated to the resulting array. The function can optionally be provided with the attributes 'target_dims' and 'output_dims'. In that case, the corresponding parameters of \code{Apply} do not need to be provided. The function can expect named dimensions for each of its inputs, in the same order as specified in 'target_dims' or, if no 'target_dims' have been provided, in the same order as provided in 'data'. #' @param ... Additional fixed arguments expected by the function provided in the parameter 'fun'. #' @param output_dims Optional list of vectors containing the names of the dimensions to be output from the fun for each of the objects it returns (or a single vector if the function has only one output). #' @param margins One or a list of vectors (or NULLs) containing the 'margin' dimensions to be looped over for each input in 'data'. If a single vector of margins is specified and multiple inputs are provided in 'data', then the single set of margins is re-used for all of the inputs. These vectors can contain either integers specifying the position of the margins, or character strings corresponding to the dimension names. If both 'margins' and 'target_dims' are specified, 'margins' takes priority. @@ -37,9 +37,9 @@ Apply <- function(data, target_dims = NULL, fun, ..., if (!is.list(data)) { data <- list(data) } - if (any(!sapply(data, is.numeric))) { - stop("Parameter 'data' must be one or a list of numeric objects.") - } + #if (any(!sapply(data, is.numeric))) { + # stop("Parameter 'data' must be one or a list of numeric objects.") + #} is_vector <- rep(FALSE, length(data)) is_unnamed <- rep(FALSE, length(data)) unnamed_dims <- c() -- GitLab