copyEnv {Biobase} | R Documentation |
These functions can be used to make copies of environments, or to get/assign all of the objects inside of an environment.
copyEnv(oldEnv, newEnv, all.names=FALSE) l2e(vals, envir)
oldEnv |
An environment to copy from |
newEnv |
An environment to copy to. If missing, a new environment with the same parent environment as oldEnv. |
envir |
An environment to get/set values to. For l2e
this can be left missing and a new environment of an
appropriate size will be returned. |
vals |
A named list of objects to assign into an environment.
The names must not include NA or "" and should
be unique. |
all.names |
Whether to retrieve objects with names that start with a dot. |
l2e
: This function takes a named list and assigns all of its
elements into an environment (using the names to name the objects).
Unless you have an existing environment which you want to reuse, it
is best to omit the envir
argument. This way, the function
will create a new environment with an efficient initial size. If the
names of vals
are not unique, a warning will be raised. The
returned environment will contain the value associated with the last
occurrence of any given duplicated name.
copyEnv
: This function will make a copy of the contents from
oldEnv
and place them into newEnv
.
Jeff Gentry and R. Gentleman
z <- new.env(hash=TRUE, parent=emptyenv(), size=29L) multiassign(c("a","b","c"), c(1,2,3), z) a <- copyEnv(z) ls(a) q <- as.list(z) g <- new.env(hash=TRUE, parent=emptyenv(), size=29L) g <- l2e(q, g) ls(g) g2 <- l2e(q)