The updated example was meant to read: f1 <- function(x = NULL, y = NULL, z = NULL){ if(missing(x)) cat("f1: x is missing\n") if(missing(y)) cat("f1: y is missing\n") }
f2 <- function(x = NULL, y = NULL, z = NULL){ if(missing(z)) cat("f2: z is missing\n") f1(x, y) } f2() Alex On Tue, Oct 1, 2019 at 10:37 AM Bertram, Alexander <a...@bedatadriven.com> wrote: > There is "missing with default" and "missing without default". > > If an argument x is missing without a default, then missing(x) is true, if > you pass x to another function, it will pass the value of the "missing > argument". (which is different than simply being missing!) > > If an argument x is missing _with_a default, then missing(x) is still > true, but if you pass x to another function, the default value is passed, > not the missing argument symbol. > > If you add default arguments to your example, you'll see this effect: > > f1 <- function(x, y, z){ > if(missing(x)) > cat("f1: x is missing\n") > if(missing(y)) > cat("f1: y is missing\n") > } > > f2 <- function(x, y, z){ > if(missing(z)) > cat("f2: z is missing\n") > f1(x, y) > } > > f2() > > prints > > f2: z is missing > > The intersection of default values, and the representation of missing > without a default as a symbol yields some unexpected and complex behaviors. > Here are a few more fun examples: > > https://github.com/bedatadriven/renjin/blob/master/tests/src/test/R/test.missing.R > > Best, > Alex > > > > On Tue, Oct 1, 2019, 10:27 Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.dun...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> >> There's a StackOverflow question >> https://stackoverflow.com/q/22024082/2554330 that references this text >> from ?missing: >> >> "Currently missing can only be used in the immediate body of the >> function that defines the argument, not in the body of a nested function >> or a local call. This may change in the future." >> >> Someone pointed out (in https://stackoverflow.com/a/58169498/2554330) >> that this isn't true in the examples they've tried: missingness does >> get passed along. This example shows it (this is slightly different >> than the SO example): >> >> f1 <- function(x, y, z){ >> if(missing(x)) >> cat("f1: x is missing\n") >> if(missing(y)) >> cat("f1: y is missing\n") >> } >> >> f2 <- function(x, y, z){ >> if(missing(z)) >> cat("f2: z is missing\n") >> f1(x, y) >> } >> >> f2() >> >> which produces >> >> f2: z is missing >> f1: x is missing >> f1: y is missing >> >> Is the documentation out of date? That quote appears to have been >> written in 2002. >> >> Duncan Murdoch >> >> ______________________________________________ >> R-devel@r-project.org mailing list >> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel >> > -- Alexander Bertram Technical Director *BeDataDriven BV* Web: http://bedatadriven.com Email: a...@bedatadriven.com Tel. Nederlands: +31(0)647205388 Skype: akbertram [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel