[Rd] Reference Classes: Generalizing Reference Class Generator objects?
John Chambers
jmc at r-project.org
Fri Oct 29 18:56:53 CEST 2010
Good diagnoses.
This thread brought up a point or two that needed some fixes to the
documentation and code. They should be in r-devel and 2.12 patched
(from rev. 53471).
Briefly:
- Initialization methods should take account of future subclasses to
your class by including and passing on the ... argument, so that
additional fields can be specified. Discussed briefly now in the
$new(...) section of ?ReferenceClasses.
- The InitFields() method is fine but was an early kludge when
callSuper() didn't work for initialize(). To allow for the case that
your class has a superclass with an initialize() method, use the
callSuper() approach. There is an example now in the documentation.
John
On 10/28/10 10:55 AM, Jon Clayden wrote:
> ?ReferenceClasses says "Reference methods can not themselves be
> generic functions; if you want additional function-based method
> dispatch, write a separate generic function and call that from the
> method". So I think you'd need to take that approach in your
> "initialize" method.
>
> Hope this helps,
> Jon
>
>
> On 28 October 2010 18:25, Daniel Lee<bearlee at alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>> Thank you. Your example really clarifies what the $initialize(...) function
>> is supposed to do.
>>
>> Do you know if there is a straightforward way to dispatch the $new(...)
>> method based on the signature of the arguments? I am thinking along the
>> lines of S4 methods with valid signatures.
>>
>> Thanks again for the example.
>>
>>
>> On 10/28/2010 12:12 PM, Jon Clayden wrote:
>>>
>>> Sorry - you don't need to assign the value of initFields(). I was
>>> going to do it in two lines but then realised one was enough... :)
>>>
>>> TestClass<- setRefClass ("TestClass",
>>> fields = list (text = "character"),
>>> methods = list (
>>> initialize = function (text) {
>>> initFields(text=paste(text,"\n")) },
>>> print = function () { cat(text) } )
>>> )
>>>
>>> All the best,
>>> Jon
>>>
>>>
>>> On 28 October 2010 15:13, Daniel Lee<bearlee at alum.mit.edu> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Is it possible to override the $new(...) in the reference class
>>>> generator? I
>>>> have tried adding a "new" method to the methods of the class, but that is
>>>> obviously not correct. I have also tried adding it to the class
>>>> generator,
>>>> but the class generator still uses the default constructor.
>>>>
>>>> As a simple example, this is the current interface:
>>>> TestClass<- setRefClass ("TestClass",
>>>> fields = list (text = "character"),
>>>> methods = list (
>>>> print = function () {cat(text)})
>>>> )
>>>> test<- TestClass$new (text="Hello World")
>>>> test$print()
>>>>
>>>> I would like to override $new(...) to be something like (add a "\n" to
>>>> the
>>>> end of the input, no need to specify input fields):
>>>> TestClass$methods (new = function (text) {
>>>> text<- paste (text, "\n")
>>>> methods:::new (def, text=text)
>>>> })
>>>>
>>>> The constructor would then be:
>>>> test<- TestClass$new ("Hello World")
>>>>
>>>> This is a subtle, but useful change. I have also tried adding to
>>>> TestClass a
>>>> method $newInstance(text), but that was not successful. If this is not
>>>> possible, could we consider augmenting the Reference Class interface to
>>>> include constructors?
>>>>
>>>> ______________________________________________
>>>> R-devel at r-project.org mailing list
>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
>>>>
>>
>
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