parse {base} | R Documentation |
Parse R Expressions
Description
parse()
returns the parsed but unevaluated expressions in an
expression
, a “list” of call
s.
str2expression(s)
and str2lang(s)
return special versions
of parse(text=s, keep.source=FALSE)
and can therefore be regarded as
transforming character strings s
to expressions, calls, etc.
Usage
parse(file = "", n = NULL, text = NULL, prompt = "?",
keep.source = getOption("keep.source"), srcfile,
encoding = "unknown")
str2lang(s)
str2expression(text)
Arguments
file |
a connection, or a character string giving the name of a
file or a URL to read the expressions from.
If |
n |
integer (or coerced to integer). The maximum number of
expressions to parse. If |
text |
character vector. The text to parse. Elements are treated as if they were lines of a file. Other R objects will be coerced to character if possible. |
prompt |
the prompt to print when parsing from the keyboard.
|
keep.source |
a logical value; if |
srcfile |
|
encoding |
encoding to be assumed for input strings. If the
value is |
s |
a |
Details
parse(....)
:-
If
text
has length greater than zero (after coercion) it is used in preference tofile
.All versions of R accept input from a connection with end of line marked by LF (as used on Unix), CRLF (as used on DOS/Windows) or CR (as used on classic Mac OS). The final line can be incomplete, that is missing the final EOL marker.
When input is taken from the console,
n = NULL
is equivalent ton = 1
, andn < 0
will read until an EOF character is read. (The EOF character is Ctrl-Z for the Windows front-ends.) The line-length limit is 4095 bytes when reading from the console (which may impose a lower limit: see ‘An Introduction to R’).The default for
srcfile
is set as follows. Ifkeep.source
is notTRUE
,srcfile
defaults to a character string, either"<text>"
or one derived fromfile
. Whenkeep.source
isTRUE
, iftext
is used,srcfile
will be set to asrcfilecopy
containing the text. If a character string is used forfile
, asrcfile
object referring to that file will be used.When
srcfile
is a character string, error messages will include the name, but source reference information will not be added to the result. Whensrcfile
is asrcfile
object, source reference information will be retained. str2expression(s)
:for a
character
vectors
,str2expression(s)
corresponds toparse(text = s, keep.source=FALSE)
, which is always of type (typeof
) andclass
expression
.str2lang(s)
:for a
character
strings
,str2lang(s)
corresponds toparse(text = s, keep.source=FALSE)[[1]]
(plus a check that boths
and theparse(*)
result are of length one) which is typically acall
but may also be asymbol
akaname
,NULL
or an atomic constant such as2
,1L
, orTRUE
. Put differently, the value ofstr2lang(.)
is a call or one of its parts, in short “a call or simpler”.
Currently, encoding is not handled in str2lang()
and
str2expression()
.
Value
parse()
and str2expression()
return an object of type
"expression"
, for parse()
with up to n
elements if specified as a non-negative integer.
str2lang(s)
, s
a string, returns “a
call
or simpler”, see the ‘Details:’ section.
When srcfile
is non-NULL
, a "srcref"
attribute
will be attached to the result containing a list of
srcref
records corresponding to each element, a
"srcfile"
attribute will be attached containing a copy of
srcfile
, and a "wholeSrcref"
attribute will be
attached containing a srcref
record corresponding to
all of the parsed text. Detailed parse information will be stored in
the "srcfile"
attribute, to be retrieved by
getParseData
.
A syntax error (including an incomplete expression) will throw an error.
Character strings in the result will have a declared encoding if
encoding
is "latin1"
or "UTF-8"
, or if
text
is supplied with every element of known encoding in a
Latin-1 or UTF-8 locale.
Partial parsing
When a syntax error occurs during parsing, parse
signals an error. The partial parse data will be stored in the
srcfile
argument if it is a srcfile
object
and the text
argument was used to supply the text. In other
cases it will be lost when the error is triggered.
The partial parse data can be retrieved using
getParseData
applied to the srcfile
object.
Because parsing was incomplete, it will typically include references
to "parent"
entries that are not present.
Note
Using parse(text = *, ..)
or its simplified and hence more
efficient versions str2lang()
or str2expression()
is at
least an order of magnitude less efficient than call(..)
or
as.call()
.
References
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
Murdoch, D. (2010). “Source References”. The R Journal, 2(2), 16–19. doi:10.32614/RJ-2010-010.
See Also
The source reference information can be used for debugging (see
e.g. setBreakpoint
) and profiling (see
Rprof
). It can be examined by getSrcref
and related functions. More detailed information is available through
getParseData
.
Examples
fil <- tempfile(fileext = ".Rdmped")
cat("x <- c(1, 4)\n x ^ 3 -10 ; outer(1:7, 5:9)\n", file = fil)
# parse 3 statements from our temp file
parse(file = fil, n = 3)
unlink(fil)
## str2lang(<string>) || str2expression(<character>) :
stopifnot(exprs = {
identical( str2lang("x[3] <- 1+4"), quote(x[3] <- 1+4))
identical( str2lang("log(y)"), quote(log(y)) )
identical( str2lang("abc" ), quote(abc) -> qa)
is.symbol(qa) & !is.call(qa) # a symbol/name, not a call
identical( str2lang("1.375" ), 1.375) # just a number, not a call
identical( str2expression(c("# a comment", "", "42")), expression(42) )
})
# A partial parse with a syntax error
txt <- "
x <- 1
an error
"
sf <- srcfile("txt")
tryCatch(parse(text = txt, srcfile = sf), error = function(e) "Syntax error.")
getParseData(sf)