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What's new in R 4.2?

2022-04-25 R
Just the interesting stuff for the day-to-day user.

Vigorous Calisthenics

Version 4.2 of the R programming language has been officially released a few days ago on April 22nd with release name "Vigourous Calisthenics". A complete list of the changes is available in R News. However, if you are interested only in changes that might affect the regular day-to-day user, keep reading.

Enforce Unit Length for Conditions

There is no scalar in R, only vectors. A scalar is represented as a vector of unit length. Thus, it makes sense that a lot of the functions and operators in base R are vectorized. This is true of the == operator. When applied to vectors, it does not check that they are equal like most languages out there; it actually checks for elementwise equality. That means that the value returned is a vector of boolean. For instance:

r$> 1:2 == c(1, 2)
[1] TRUE TRUE

r$> c(1, 2) == c(1, 3)
[1]  TRUE FALSE

It is standard practice to use == to check for equality in conditional statements. However, as warned by R documentation, this is bad form. The reason why should be obvious from the second statement in the previous example. A proper equality operator should return a single boolean value, which is not the case for ==. In fact, since there is no such thing as a "single value" in R (i.e. a scalar), statements such as if or while fall back to checking the first entry of the vector they're passed. While convenient, this behaviour can quickly lead to unintended consequences and hard to detect bugs:

r$> if (c(1, 2) == c(1, 3))
        print(":)")

[1] ":)"
Warning message:
In if (c(1, 2) == c(1, 3)) print(":)") :
  the condition has length > 1 and only the first element will be used

This can be confusing since many users expect such a condition to check for the equality of the vectors. The warning message is clear and informative but can easily be lost in complex outputs. Well, this is not an issue anymore starting with R 4.2 as the warning is turned into an error:

r$> if (c(1, 2) == c(1, 3))
        print(":)")
Error in if (1:2 == c(1, 2)) print(":)") : the condition has length > 1

Logical Operators

Perhaps a bit more confusing is the behaviour of the so-called "long-form" logical operators && and ||. Similar to other languages, those are short-circuit boolean operators. However, since this is R, there is no such thing as a scalar so they have to work with vectors. Just like if and while, they only take into consideration the first entry of the vectors they're passed. Starting with R 4.2, they will warn the user when a vector of length strictly greater than 1 is used. According to a somewhat menacing statement in R News, the warning will be turned into an error "no later than May 2."

Placeholder for the Pipe Operator

The base R pipe operator |> is pretty straightforward: x |> f(y) is parsed as f(x, y) and that's pretty much all there is to it. Starting with 4.2, it is now possible to spice things up a little bit with the _ placeholder. _ is somewhat similar to dyplyr's . though not quite as powerful. As an example, let's say we're interested in the minimum of each of the 2 variables in the cars dataset. This can be done with and without |> as follow:

r$> lapply(cars, min)
$speed
[1] 4

$dist
[1] 2

r$> min |> {\(f) lapply(cars, f)}()
$speed
[1] 4

$dist
[1] 2

This last formulation is awkward, to say the least! But since the function should be passed as the second argument of lapply, there is no way around it... until R 4.2! Now, we can make use of _ to make it simpler:

r$> min |> lapply(cars, FUN = _)
$speed
[1] 4

$dist
[1] 2

Way cleaner! That being said, _ has two limitations:

The more demanding pipe user is gonna have to keep using good ol' magrittr %>%, at least for now.

Hashtables

R 4.2 is shipped with an experimental implementation of hash tables. R arguably already provides associative data structures in the form of named vectors. Note that this includes lists which are merely vectors of references and matrices/arrays which are vectors with a dim attribute. In that regard, the introduction of hash tables is probably not that groundbreaking. In my opinion, the main interest of hashtabs lies in the fact that they are the only general-purpose mutable data structure in base R. Everything else is either non-mutable (vectors) or non-general purpose (environments). If the implementation is good, why not?

The documentation is pretty self explanatory. A simple phone book might look somewhat like this:

r$> phonebook <- hashtab()

r$> sethash(phonebook, "Ronald Fisher", "870-461-5425")

r$> sethash(phonebook, "Karl Pearson", "270-706-3966")

r$> numhash(phonebook)
[1] 2

r$> gethash(phonebook, "Ronald Fisher")
[1] "870-461-5425"

r$> maphash(phonebook,
            \(key, val) print(paste(key, val, sep = ", cell: ")))
[1] "Karl Pearson, cell: 270-706-3966"
[1] "Ronald Fisher, cell: 870-461-5425"

r$> remhash(phonebook, "Ronald Fisher")
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