Check if an argument is a single atomic value
Check if an argument is a single atomic value
checkScalar(x, na.ok = FALSE, null.ok = FALSE) check_scalar(x, na.ok = FALSE, null.ok = FALSE) assertScalar( x, na.ok = FALSE, null.ok = FALSE, .var.name = vname(x), add = NULL ) assert_scalar( x, na.ok = FALSE, null.ok = FALSE, .var.name = vname(x), add = NULL ) testScalar(x, na.ok = FALSE, null.ok = FALSE) test_scalar(x, na.ok = FALSE, null.ok = FALSE) expect_scalar(x, na.ok = FALSE, null.ok = FALSE, info = NULL, label = vname(x))
x |
[any] |
na.ok |
[ |
null.ok |
[ |
.var.name |
[ |
add |
[ |
info |
[character(1)] |
label |
[ |
This function does not distinguish between
NA
, NA_integer_
, NA_real_
, NA_complex_
NA_character_
and NaN
.
Depending on the function prefix:
If the check is successful, the functions
assertScalar
/assert_scalar
return
x
invisibly, whereas
checkScalar
/check_scalar
and
testScalar
/test_scalar
return
TRUE
.
If the check is not successful,
assertScalar
/assert_scalar
throws an error message,
testScalar
/test_scalar
returns FALSE
,
and checkScalar
returns a string with the error message.
The function expect_scalar
always returns an
expectation
.
Other scalars:
checkCount()
,
checkFlag()
,
checkInt()
,
checkNumber()
,
checkScalarNA()
,
checkString()
testScalar(1) testScalar(1:10)
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