Hi Martin,

On 05/18/2015 05:14 AM, Martin Maechler wrote:
 From R-help, subject  "Variable number of loops"
I've opened a new thread, moving from R-help to R-devel ..

Jim Lemon <drjimle...@gmail.com>
     on Sun, 17 May 2015 09:19:06 +1000 writes:

     > Hi all, Given the number of help requests that involve
     > permutations/combinations, and the less than obvious
     > naming of the expand.grid function, perhaps adding an
     > alias such as "permute.elements" or "combine.elements"
     > might ease the tasks of both searchers and those offering
     > help. Neither of the above names appear to be used at
     > present.

     > Jim


Using \alias{} is not a very good thing here, since as you know they
are *key*s that must remain unique if possible and they can be
linked to -- which I think would not be helpful for  'expand.grid'.

It seems to me that Jim was maybe suggesting to define an alias for the
expand.grid function i.e. something like:

  permute.elements <- expand.grid

or

  combine.elements <- expand.grid

as a way to address the "less than obvious naming of the expand.grid
function". But maybe I misunderstood...

Cheers,
H.


Rather, for quite a few years now, we have had \concept{} for
adding "search keywords", i.e., things that
help.search()  and hence ??<topic>  will find.

The other advantage of \concept{} is that you can use short
phrases, i.e.,

\concept{all variable combinations}

would be possible here.

(Better wording proposals for this specific case are welcome! --
  maybe privately).

Martin Maechler, ETH Zurich


     > On Sun, May 17, 2015 at 5:54 AM, Bert Gunter
     > <gunter.ber...@gene.com> wrote:
     >> 1. Please always reply to the list unless there is a
     >> compelling reason to keep the discussion private. You
     >> will have a better chance of getting something useful
     >> that way.
     >>
     >> 2. I don't know what you mean by "I don't have a fixed
     >> number of variables." You have to specify at least the
     >> number of variables and how many levels each has in order
     >> to work out what you requested, which is **NOT** the
     >> number of permutations but the number of combinations
     >> AFAICS, which is exactly what expand.grid will give you.
     >>
     >> 3. Maybe what you're looking for is the ... arguments in
     >> function calls, which would be used along the lines of:
     >>
     >> myfun <- function( x,y,...)  { ## some code combs <-
     >> expand.grid(...)  ## some more code }
     >>
     >> Any good R tutorial will tell you about this if this is
     >> unfamiliar.
     >>
     >> 4. Another possibility might be to deliver a list of
     >> named variables as an argument and then use do.call, e.g.
     >>
     >> myfun <- (x,y, alist) { ## some code combs <-
     >> do.call(expand.grid, alist) ## some more code }
     >>
     >> ?do.call and/or a tutorial for details.
     >>
     >> 5. Otherwise, maybe someone else can figure out what
     >> you're looking for.
     >>
     >> Cheers, Bert
     >>
     >>
     >>
     >> Bert Gunter Genentech Nonclinical Biostatistics (650)
     >> 467-7374
     >>
     >> "Data is not information. Information is not
     >> knowledge. And knowledge is certainly not wisdom."
     >> Clifford Stoll
     >>
     >>
     >>
     >>
     >> On Sat, May 16, 2015 at 11:16 AM, WRAY NICHOLAS
     >> <nicholas.w...@ntlworld.com> wrote:
     >>> I might be but doesn't expand.grid need a defined and
     >>> listed number of inputs?  The problem I'm having is that
     >>> the number of variables is not fixed, so I'm not sure
     >>> whether I can reference the variable number of variables
     >>> by using a vector -- haven't had time to try yet But
     >>> thanks anyway Nick Wray
     >>>
     >>> On 16 May 2015 at 14:28, Bert Gunter
     >>> <gunter.ber...@gene.com> wrote:
     >>>>
     >>>> Are you trying to reinvent ?expand.grid ?
     >>>>
     >>>> -- Bert
     >>>>
     >>>> Bert Gunter Genentech Nonclinical Biostatistics (650)
     >>>> 467-7374
     >>>>
     >>>> "Data is not information. Information is not
     >>>> knowledge. And knowledge is certainly not wisdom."
     >>>> Clifford Stoll
     >>>>
  [...............]

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Hervé Pagès

Program in Computational Biology
Division of Public Health Sciences
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
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