On Tue, 4 Apr 2006, Henrik Bengtsson wrote: > Hi, > > this relates to the question "How to set a former environment?" asked > yesterday. What is the best way to to return a function with a > minimal environment from a function? Here is a dummy example: > > foo <- function(huge) { > scale <- mean(huge) > function(x) { scale * x } > } > > fcn <- foo(1:10e5) > > The problem with this approach is that the environment of 'fcn' does > not only hold 'scale' but also the memory consuming object 'huge', > i.e. > > env <- environment(fcn) > ll(envir=env) # ll() from R.oo > # member data.class dimension object.size > # 1 huge numeric 1000000 4000028 > # 2 scale numeric 1 36 > > save(env, file="temp.RData") > file.info("temp.RData")$size > # [1] 2007624 > > I generate quite a few of these and my 'huge' objects are of order > 100Mb, and I want to keep memory usage as well as file sizes to a > minimum. What I do now, is to remove variable from the local > environment of 'foo' before returning, i.e. > > foo2 <- function(huge) { > scale <- mean(huge) > rm(huge) > function(x) { scale * x } > } > > fcn <- foo2(1:10e5) > env <- environment(fcn) > ll(envir=env) > # member data.class dimension object.size > # 1 scale numeric 1 36 > > save(env, file="temp.RData") > file.info("temp.RData")$size > # [1] 156 > > Since my "foo" functions are complicated and contains many local > variables, it becomes tedious to identify and remove all of them, so > instead I try: > > foo3 <- function(huge) { > scale <- mean(huge); > env <- new.env(); > assign("scale", scale, envir=env); > bar <- function(x) { scale * x }; > environment(bar) <- env; > bar; > } > > fcn <- foo3(1:10e5) > > But, > > env <- environment(fcn) > save(env, file="temp.RData"); > file.info("temp.RData")$size > # [1] 2007720 > > When I try to set the parent environment of 'env' to emptyenv(), it > does not work, e.g. > > fcn(2) > # Error in fcn(2) : attempt to apply non-function > > but with the new.env(parent=baseenv()) it works fine. The "base" > environment has the empty environment as a parent. So, I try to do > the same myself, i.e. new.env(parent=new.env(parent=emptyenv())), but > once again I get
I don't think you want to remove baseenv() from the environment. If you do, no functions from baseenv will be visible inside fcn. These include "{" and "*", which are necessary for your function. I think the error message comes from being unable to find "{". Also, there is no memory use from having baseenv in the environment, since all the objects in baseenv are always present. -thomas Thomas Lumley Assoc. Professor, Biostatistics [EMAIL PROTECTED] University of Washington, Seattle ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel