| Type: | Package | 
| Title: | Flexible Binding for Complex Function Evaluation with the Base R |> Pipe | 
| Version: | 0.1.2 | 
| Maintainer: | Brenton M. Wiernik <brenton@wiernik.org> | 
| Description: | Provides a simple function to bind a piped object to a placeholder symbol to enable complex function evaluation with the base R |> pipe. | 
| License: | GPL-3 | 
| Encoding: | UTF-8 | 
| Language: | en-US | 
| URL: | https://github.com/bwiernik/pipebind/ | 
| BugReports: | https://github.com/bwiernik/pipebind/issues | 
| RoxygenNote: | 7.2.3.9000 | 
| NeedsCompilation: | no | 
| Packaged: | 2023-08-30 18:20:54 UTC; brentonw | 
| Author: | Brenton M. Wiernik | 
| Repository: | CRAN | 
| Date/Publication: | 2023-08-30 18:40:02 UTC | 
Bind a (piped) object to a symbol for complex function evaluation
Description
The base R |> pipe
lacks some advanced functionality compared to the
{magrittr} %>% pipe.
For example, the piped object can only appear once on the right-hand
side of the pipe (either as the first unnamed argument or elsewhere using the
_ placeholder in R 4.2.0 and later), and the _ placeholder cannot
appear on the left side of sub-setting functions like $, [, [[, or @.
The bind() function is a way to conveniently circumvent these limitations.
Pipe an object into bind(), choose a placeholder symbol to represent it,
then use this placeholder to refer the piped object in any way and as many
times as desired in an R expression.
The Greek letter
λ()
is available as an alias for bind().
Usage
bind(.pipeValue, .pipeBind, ...)
Arguments
| .pipeValue | The object to bind. Typically specified by piping into the
 | 
| .pipeBind | The placeholder symbol to use to represent the piped object. Can be any valid R object name. | 
| ... | An R expression. Any valid R code (expression). | 
Value
The results of the expression, evaluated using the piped object.
Examples
# Piping to a non-first argument
mtcars |>
  transform(kmL = mpg / 2.35) |>
  bind(d, lm(kmL ~ hp, data = d))
# Using the piped value multiple times
rnorm(10, mean = 10) |>
  bind(x, x - mean(x))
# Using the piped value in multiple arguments
c(a = 1, b = 2, c = 3) |>
  bind(x, paste(names(x), x, sep = " = "))
# Subsetting the piped value
mtcars |>
  bind(d, d$mpg)
Pipe-able aliases
Description
pipebind provides several aliases for unary/binary operators (e.g., +)
and replacement functions (e.g., names<-()) that facilitate using these
functions in a |> chain.
Some unary/binary operators cannot currently be used with the |> pipe,
such as +, -, or %*%. These aliases provide a way to use these functions
with the |> pipe.
Currently implemented aliases are
| Extract and replace elements | |
| bracket | `[` | 
| double_bracket | `[[` | 
| assign_bracket | `[<-` | 
| assign_double_bracket | `[<-` | 
| dollar | `$` | 
| at_sign | `@` | 
| Arithmetic operators | |
| add | `+` | 
| subtract | `-` | 
| multiply | `*` | 
| divide | `/` | 
| integer_divide | `%/%` | 
| mod | `%%` | 
| raise_to_power | `^` | 
| matrix_multiply | `%*%` | 
| Logical comparisons | |
| and | `&` | 
| or | `|` | 
| not | `!` | 
| single_and | `&&` | 
| single_or | `||` | 
| equals | `==` | 
| greater_than | `>` | 
| greater_or_equal | `>=` | 
| less_than | `<` | 
| less_or_equal | `<=` | 
| is_in | `%in%` | 
| Assign attributes | |
| assign_names | `names<-` | 
| assign_colnames | `colnames<-` | 
| assign_rownames | `rownames<-` | 
| assign_dimnames | `dimnames<-` | 
| assign_class | `class<-` | 
| assign_attributes | `attributes<-` | 
| assign_attr | `attr<-` | 
| assign_levels | `levels<-` | 
| assign_contrasts | `contrasts<-` | 
| assign_units | `units<-` | 
| assign_comment | `comment<-` | 
| assign_diag | `diag<-` | 
| assign_dim | `dim<-` | 
| assign_length | `length<-` | 
| assign_as_na | `is.na<-` | 
Note
Inspired and some alias names adapted from from magrittr. Reused code Copyright (c) 2023 magrittr authors.
Examples
 mtcars |>
   bracket(, 1:4)
 1:10 |>
   add(5) |>
   matrix(dimnames = list(letters[1:10], "x")) |>
   matrix_multiply(seq(10, 100, by = 10))
data.frame(1:10, letters[1:10]) |>
  assign_names(c("numbers", "letters"))