Non-Standard Evaluation (NSE hereafter) occurs when R expressions are
captured and evaluated in a manner different than if they had been
executed without intervention. subset is a canonical
example, which we use here with the built-in iris data
set:
subset(iris, Sepal.Width > 4.1)
##    Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length Petal.Width Species
## 16          5.7         4.4          1.5         0.4  setosa
## 34          5.5         4.2          1.4         0.2  setosaSepal.Width does not exist in the global environment,
yet this works because subset captures the expression and
evaluates it within iris.
A limitation of NSE is that it is difficult to use programmatically:
exp.a <- quote(Sepal.Width > 4.1)
subset(iris, exp.a)
## Error in subset.data.frame(iris, exp.a): 'subset' must be logicaloshka::expand facilitates programmable NSE, as with this
simplified version of subset:
subset2 <- function(x, subset) {
  sub.exp <- expand(substitute(subset), x, parent.frame())
  sub.val <- eval(sub.exp, x, parent.frame())
  x[!is.na(sub.val) & sub.val, ]
}
subset2(iris, exp.a)
##    Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length Petal.Width Species
## 16          5.7         4.4          1.5         0.4  setosa
## 34          5.5         4.2          1.4         0.2  setosaexpand is recursive:
exp.b <- quote(Species == 'virginica')
exp.c <- quote(Sepal.Width > 3.6)
exp.d <- quote(exp.b & exp.c)
subset2(iris, exp.d)
##     Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Petal.Length Petal.Width   Species
## 118          7.7         3.8          6.7         2.2 virginica
## 132          7.9         3.8          6.4         2.0 virginicaWe abide by R semantics so that programmable NSE functions are almost identical to normal NSE functions, with programmability as a bonus.
oshka,
including a brief comparison to rlang.oshka in which we recreate simplified
versions of dplyr and data.table that
implement programmable NSE with oshka::expand.This package is proof-of-concept. If it elicits enough interest we will re-write the internals in C and add helper functions for common use patterns.
install.packages('oshka')
# or development version
devtools::instal_github('brodieg/oshka@development')Feedback is welcome, particularly if you are aware of some NSE pitfalls we may be ignoring.
Brodie Gaslam is a hobbyist programmer based on the US East Coast.
The name of this package is derived from “matryoshka”, the Russian nesting dolls.