[Rd] Corrupt internal row names when creating a data.frame with `attributes<-`
Kevin Ushey
kev|nu@hey @end|ng |rom gm@||@com
Tue Feb 16 20:05:33 CET 2021
Strictly speaking, I don't think this is a "corrupt" representation,
given that any APIs used to access that internal representation will
call abs() on the row count encoded within. At least, as far as I can
tell, there aren't any adverse downstream effects from having the row
names attribute encoded with this particular internal representation.
On the other hand, the documentation in ?.row_names_info states, for
the 'type' argument:
integer. Currently type = 0 returns the internal "row.names" attribute
(possibly NULL), type = 2 the number of rows implied by the attribute,
and type = 1 the latter with a negative sign for ‘automatic’ row
names.
so one could argue that it's incorrect in light of that documentation
(the row names are "automatic", but the row count is not marked with a
negative sign). Or perhaps this is a different "type" of internal
automatic row name, since it was generated from an already-existing
integer sequence rather than "automatically" in a call to
data.frame().
Kevin
On Sun, Feb 14, 2021 at 6:51 AM Davis Vaughan <davis using rstudio.com> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> I believe that the internal row names object created at this line in
> `row_names_gets()` should be using `-n`, not `n`.
> https://github.com/wch/r-source/blob/b30641d3f58703bbeafee101f983b6b263b7f27d/src/main/attrib.c#L71
>
> This can currently generate corrupt internal row names when using
> `attributes<-` or `structure()`, which calls `attributes<-`.
>
> # internal row names are typically `c(NA, -n)`
> df <- data.frame(x = 1:3)
> .row_names_info(df, type = 0L)
> #> [1] NA -3
>
> # using `attributes()` materializes their non-internal form
> attrs <- attributes(df)
> attrs
> #> $names
> #> [1] "x"
> #>
> #> $class
> #> [1] "data.frame"
> #>
> #> $row.names
> #> [1] 1 2 3
>
> # let's make a data frame from scratch with `attributes<-`
> data <- list(x = 1:3)
> attributes(data) <- attrs
>
> # oh no!
> .row_names_info(data, type = 0L)
> #> [1] NA 3
>
> # Note: Must have `nrow(df) > 2` to demonstrate this bug, as otherwise
> # internal row names are not attempted to be created in the C level
> # `row_names_gets()`
>
> Thanks,
> Davis
>
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>
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