Convert to function or closure
as_function()
transforms a one-sided formula into a function.
This powers the lambda syntax in packages like purrr.
as_closure()
first passes its argument to as_function()
. If
the result is a primitive function, it regularises it to a proper
closure (see is_function()
about primitive functions). Some
special control flow primitives like if
, for
, or break
can't be coerced to a closure.
as_function(x, env = caller_env()) is_lambda(x) as_closure(x, env = caller_env())
x |
A function or formula. If a function, it is used as is. If a formula, e.g. Lambdas currently do not support nse-force, due to the way the arguments are handled internally. |
env |
Environment in which to fetch the function in case |
f <- as_function(~ .x + 1) f(10) g <- as_function(~ -1 * .) g(4) h <- as_function(~ .x - .y) h(6, 3) # Functions created from a formula have a special class: is_lambda(f) is_lambda(as_function(function() "foo")) # Primitive functions are regularised as closures as_closure(list) as_closure("list") # Operators have `.x` and `.y` as arguments, just like lambda # functions created with the formula syntax: as_closure(`+`) as_closure(`~`) # Use a regular function for tidy evaluation, also when calling functions # that use tidy evaluation: ## Bad: e <- as_function(~ as_label(ensym(.x))) ## Good: e <- as_function(function(x) as_label(ensym(x))) e(y)
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