Hi Dirk, N could be anywhere between 3-10.
Thanks! I will definitely look into how to do those. Also, if Rcpp::NumericVector vec3 =Rcpp::NumericVector( Rcpp::Dimension(4, 5, 6)); In this case, how do we access element vec3[1,2,3]? Thanks again, James On Friday, August 16, 2013, Dirk Eddelbuettel wrote: > > Hi James, > > On 16 August 2013 at 11:59, James Li wrote: > | Dear Dirk and Rcpp-devel members, > | > | I am currently passing a multidimensional (N > 2) array (i.e. > | array(NA, dim = rep(3,5)) ) from R via Rcpp using > > > How big is 'N' going to be? > > | "in C++:" > | > | //[[Rcpp::export]] > | Rcpp::List check_arrayC (Rcpp::NumericVector x, Rcpp::IntegerVector > modes){ > | //do stuff to x > | return Rcpp::List::create(Rcpp::_["data"] = x, Rcpp::_["modes"] = > modes); > | } > | > | > | "in R:" > | > | a <- array(1:32, dim=rep(2,5)) > | b <- check_arrayC(a, dim(a)) > | > | While I know that a multidimensional array is stored as a contiguous > | array internally, is there currently a more natural/efficient way to > | pass it back and forth within Rcpp? > | > | Also from Dirk's book, it seems that an instance of > | Rcpp::NumericVector can be instantiated into a multidimensional array > | via > | > | Rcpp::NumericVector vec3 =Rcpp::NumericVector( Rcpp::Dimension(4, 5, 6)); > | > | In this case, how do we access element vec3[1,2,3]? > | > | Some background about what I am trying to do: I would like to create a > | multidimensional array wrapper class around the base R multi-way array > | class. I would also like to be able to pass this multidimensional > | array via Rcpp to do all the heavy-lifting in c++. Ideally, I could > | also convert the mda into a Boost::multi_array. > > For a moderately-sized project (at work, not open source) I had a very good > experience using Armadillo 'cubes' (3-d matrices) which I occassionally > stored in 'fields' (which I though of as lists of such cubes). I think in > most (all?) cases I reduces data to 2-d matrices before returning that > R. That worked great. > > Beyond that ... you are on your own as there is very little C++ support > already useable by Rcpp. You'd have to write custom as<>() and wrap() > methods (which is not hard and may well be worth it). > > Cheers, Dirk > > | Thanks in advance for any help. > | > | -James > | > | -- > | James Li | Ph.D. Candidate | http://jamesyili.com/ > | Dept. of Statistical Science | Cornell University > | _______________________________________________ > | Rcpp-devel mailing list > | Rcpp-devel@lists.r-forge.r-project.org <javascript:;> > | https://lists.r-forge.r-project.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/rcpp-devel > > -- > Dirk Eddelbuettel | e...@debian.org <javascript:;> | > http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com > -- James Li *|* Ph.D. Candidate *|* http://jamesyili.com/ Dept. of Statistical Science *|* Cornell University
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