List objects
It adds one slot, the elementType
slot, to the two slots shared by
all Vector objects.
The elementType
slot is the preferred location for List
subclasses to store the type of data represented in the sequence. It is
designed to take a character of length 1 representing the class of the
sequence elements. While the List class performs no validity checking
based on elementType
, if a subclass expects elements to be of a
given type, that subclass is expected to perform the necessary validity
checking. For example, the subclass IntegerList (defined
in the IRanges package) has elementType = "integer"
and its
validity method checks if this condition is TRUE.
To be functional, a class that inherits from List must define at least
a "[["
method (in addition to the minimum set of Vector
methods).
List objects are typically constructed using one of the 3 following methods:
Use of a constructor function. Many constructor functions are
provided for List objects e.g. List
,
IntegerList
, RleList
,
IntegerRangesList
,
GRangesList
, etc...
Which one to use depends on the particular type of List object
to construct. The name of a constructor function is always
the name of a valid class. If it's the name of a concrete
class (e.g. the GRangesList
constructor
defined in the GenomicRanges package), then the constructor
function returns an instance of that class. If it's the name of a
virtual class (e.g. the List
constructor defined in
this package, or the IntegerList
or
RleList
or
IntegerRangesList
constructors defined in the
IRanges package), then the returned object belongs to a
concrete subclass of that virtual class. Which subclass exactly
depends on each constructor function (see man page of a particular
constructor function for the details).
Coercion to List or to a List subclass. Many coercion methods are
provided to turn any object into a List object. One general and
convenient way to convert any vector-like object into a List is to
call as(x, "List")
. This will typically yield an object from
a subclass of CompressedList.
Use of extractList
. This function, defined
in the IRanges package, extracts user-specified groups of
elements from a vector-like object and returns them in a List (or
sometimes list) object.
In the following code snippets, x
is a List object.
length(x)
:
Get the number of list elements in x
.
names(x)
, names(x) <- value
:
Get or set the names of the elements in the List.
mcols(x, use.names=FALSE)
, mcols(x) <- value
:
Get or set the metadata columns. See Vector man page for
more information.
elementType(x)
:
Get the scalar string naming the class from which all elements must
derive.
elementNROWS(x)
:
Get the length (or nb of row for a matrix-like object) of each of
the elements. Equivalent to sapply(x, NROW)
.
isEmpty(x)
:
Returns a logical indicating either if the sequence has no elements
or if all its elements are empty.
To List.
as(x, "List")
: Converts a vector-like object into a
List, usually a CompressedList derivative.
One notable exception is when x
is an ordinary list,
in which case as(x, "List")
returns a SimpleList
derivative.
To explicitly request a SimpleList derivative, call
as(x, "SimpleList")
.
See ?CompressedList
(you might need to load
the IRanges package first) and ?SimpleList
for
more information about the CompressedList and SimpleList
representations.
From List. In the code snippets below, x
is a List object.
as.list(x, ...)
, as(from, "list")
:
Turns x
into an ordinary list.
unlist(x, recursive=TRUE, use.names=TRUE)
:
Concatenates the elements of x
into a single vector-like
object (of class elementType(x)
).
as.data.frame(x, row.names=NULL, optional=FALSE ,
value.name="value", use.outer.mcols=FALSE,
group_name.as.factor=FALSE, ...)
:
Coerces a List
to a data.frame
. The result has the
same length as unlisted x
with two additional columns,
group
and group_name
. group
is an integer
that indicates which list element the record came from.
group_name
holds the list name associated with each
record; value is character
by default and factor
when
group_name.as.factor
is TRUE.
When use.outer.mcols
is TRUE the metadata columns on the
outer list elements of x
are replicated out and included
in the data.frame
. List objects that unlist to a
single vector (column) are given the column name 'value' by default.
A custom name can be provided in value.name
.
Splitting values in the resulting data.frame
by the original
groups in x
should be done using the group
column as
the f
argument to splitAsList
. To relist data, use
x
as the skeleton
argument to relist
.
In the code snippets below, x
is a List object.
x[i]
:
Return a new List object made of the list elements selected by
subscript i
. Subscript i
can be of any type supported
by subsetting of a Vector object (see Vector man page for the
details), plus the following types: IntegerList,
LogicalList, CharacterList,
integer-RleList, logical-RleList,
character-RleList, and IntegerRangesList.
Those additional types perform subsetting within the list elements
rather than across them.
x[i] <- value
:
Replacement version of x[i]
.
x[[i]]
:
Return the selected list element i
, where i
is an
numeric or character vector of length 1.
x[[i]] <- value
:
Replacement version of x[[i]]
.
x$name
, x$name <- value
:
Similar to x[[name]]
and x[[name]] <- value
, but
name
is taken literally as an element name.
P. Aboyoun and H. Pagès
splitAsList for splitting a vector-like object into a List object.
List-utils for common operations on List objects.
Vector objects for the parent class.
The SimpleList class for a direct extension of the List class.
The CompressedList class defined in the IRanges package for another direct extension of the List class.
The IntegerList, RleList, and IRanges classes and constructors defined in the IRanges package for more examples of concrete List subclasses.
The extractList function defined in the IRanges package for grouping elements of a vector-like object into a list-like object.
showClass("List") # shows only the known subclasses define in this package
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