Partial apply a function, filling in some arguments.
Partial function application allows you to modify a function by pre-filling some of the arguments. It is particularly useful in conjunction with functionals and other function operators.
Note that an argument can only be partialised once.
partial(.f, ..., .env = NULL, .lazy = NULL, .first = NULL)
.f |
a function. For the output source to read well, this should be a named function. |
... |
named arguments to Pass an empty These dots support quasiquotation and quosures. If you unquote a value, it is evaluated only once at function creation time. Otherwise, it is evaluated each time the function is called. |
.env |
Soft-deprecated as of purrr 0.3.0. The environments are now captured via quosures. |
.lazy |
Soft-deprecated as of purrr 0.3.0. Please unquote the arguments that should be evaluated once at function creation time. |
.first |
Soft-deprecated as of purrr 0.3.0. Please pass an
empty argument |
# Partial is designed to replace the use of anonymous functions for # filling in function arguments. Instead of: compact1 <- function(x) discard(x, is.null) # we can write: compact2 <- partial(discard, .p = is.null) # partial() works fine with functions that do non-standard # evaluation my_long_variable <- 1:10 plot2 <- partial(plot, my_long_variable) plot2() plot2(runif(10), type = "l") # Note that you currently can't partialise arguments multiple times: my_mean <- partial(mean, na.rm = TRUE) my_mean <- partial(my_mean, na.rm = FALSE) try(my_mean(1:10)) # The evaluation of arguments normally occurs "lazily". Concretely, # this means that arguments are repeatedly evaluated across invocations: f <- partial(runif, n = rpois(1, 5)) f f() f() # You can unquote an argument to fix it to a particular value. # Unquoted arguments are evaluated only once when the function is created: f <- partial(runif, n = !!rpois(1, 5)) f f() f() # By default, partialised arguments are passed before new ones: my_list <- partial(list, 1, 2) my_list("foo") # Control the position of these arguments by passing an empty # `... = ` argument: my_list <- partial(list, 1, ... = , 2) my_list("foo")
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