[R] S3 generics need identical signature?
Duncan Murdoch
murdoch.duncan at gmail.com
Mon Jun 21 16:17:14 CEST 2010
On 21/06/2010 9:31 AM, Gábor Csárdi wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> "Writing R Extensions" explicitly says that
>
> A method must have all the arguments of the generic, including ...
> if the generic does.
> A method must have arguments in exactly the same order as the generic.
> If the generic specifies defaults, all methods should use the same
> defaults.
>
> This is clear. R CMD check even checks for this.
>
> But then how is it possible that for plot(), which is an S3 generic,
> plot.default(), plot.formula() and plot.table(), etc. all have
> different arguments?
>
> The question is not simply theoretical, I have two S3 generics in my
> package, and one is reported by R CMD check, but the other not, and I
> fail to see why the difference.
>
> Moreover, R CMD check reports:
> * checking S3 generic/method consistency ... WARNING
> plot:
> function(x, ...)
> plot.communities:
> function(communities, graph, colbar, col, mark.groups, layout,
> edge.color, ...)
>
> But actually, the signature of plot() seems to be
> > plot
> function (x, y, ...)
> [...]
>
> I am confused. What am I missing?
The requirement is that the methods need to have signatures that contain
all the arguments of the generic. If the generic includes ..., then the
methods can add other arguments, too. So with the generic for plot() as
you show above, any plot method is required to have x and y as the first
two arguments, and ... as an argument, but they can have other args
too. Looking at them:
head(plot.default)
1 function (x, y = NULL, type = "p", xlim = NULL, ylim = NULL,
2 log = "", main = NULL, sub = NULL, xlab = NULL, ylab = NULL,
3 ann = par("ann"), axes = TRUE, frame.plot = axes, panel.first = NULL,
4 panel.last = NULL, asp = NA, ...)
This is okay.
head(graphics:::plot.formula)
1 function (formula, data = parent.frame(), ..., subset, ylab =
varnames[response],
2 ask = dev.interactive())
This violates the rule, so if someone does this:
y <- rnorm(10)
x <- 1:10
formula <- y ~ x
plot(formula)
they'll get what they want, but
plot(x = formula)
they'll get an obscure error message:
> plot(x=formula)
Error in terms.formula(formula, data = data) :
argument is not a valid model
head(graphics:::plot.table)
1 function (x, type = "h", ylim = c(0, max(x)), lwd = 2, xlab = NULL,
2 ylab = NULL, frame.plot = is.num, ...)
This also violates the rule, but it's hard to think of an example where
it might cause trouble.
HOWEVER, plot() is a very old function, and methods were written for it
long before the current rule was established. So it is handled
specially by the check code.
The y argument is not required (see the checkArgs code in
src/library/tools/R/QC.R), and apparently the first arg doesn't need to
be named x in plot.formula, due to some other exception which I can't
spot right now. So I would not use the base code for plot() as an
example of what you should do.
Duncan Murdoch
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