Thanks Duncan, I understood. Your explanation is really great. Thank you so much for your time.
--- On Wed, 7/21/10, Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.dun...@gmail.com> wrote: > From: Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.dun...@gmail.com> > Subject: Re: [R] Objects within environment > To: "Megh Dal" <megh700...@yahoo.com> > Cc: r-h...@stat.math.ethz.ch > Date: Wednesday, July 21, 2010, 10:15 PM > On 21/07/2010 12:27 PM, Megh Dal > wrote: > > Hi Duncan, thanks for your clarification. However I do > not think I could really understand the "envir" argument in > objects() function..... > > > > It is saying "an alternative argument for > name........" Is the "alternative" means the alternative of, > let say, "package:graphics" (which is the name of an > environment?). Can you give me an example of an alternative > argument of that particular environment? > > > > as.environment("package:graphics") is an environment. > "package:graphics" is its name. > > This is "specifying the environment evaluation > environment." What does the phase "environment evaluation > environment" mean? Can you give me an example? > > > > That looks like a typo to me. "Environment evaluation > environment" is meaningless. > > "Mostly there for back compatibility": again totally > in dark, what does it mean for "back compatibility?" An > example would definitely be great. > > > > Presumably some older release of R used envir, and we still > have it so that old code will still work. But that's a > signal that new code should never need to use it. > > Toy said "you need to give an environment, not the > name of one". If I call someone I need to call with his > name, right? Then if I need to give an environment then, > without its name how can I do so? > > > > This is a computer language, not a conversation. > Words have technical meanings that aren't always perfect > matches to English meanings of the same words. Here > the "name" of an environment is what you get when you ask > for the "name" attribute of it. There are lots of > different ways to refer to objects other than by the "name" > in that technical sense. For example, you could say > > x <- as.environment("package:graphics") # uses the > environment's "name" > ls(envir=x) # refers to it by a variable holding it. > > Duncan Murdoch > > Can you please explain me in simple english? I think R > help file should use more non-technical simple english > language so that student like me can understand R in more > easier way! > > > > --- On Wed, 7/21/10, Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.dun...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > > From: Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.dun...@gmail.com> > > > Subject: Re: [R] Objects within environment > > > To: "Megh Dal" <megh700...@yahoo.com> > > > Cc: r-h...@stat.math.ethz.ch > > > Date: Wednesday, July 21, 2010, 4:48 PM > > > On 21/07/2010 5:57 AM, Megh Dal > > > wrote: > > > > Hi all, I have following environments loaded > with my > > > current R session: > > > > > >> search() > > > > [1] ".GlobalEnv" > > "package:stats" > > "package:graphics" > "package:grDevices" > > > > [5] "package:utils" > > "package:datasets" > > "package:methods" "Autoloads" > > [9] "package:base" > > > How can I find the objects under a specific > > > environment? Here I tries following: > > > > > >> objects(envir="package:base") > > > > Error in objects(envir = "package:base") : > invalid > > > 'envir' argument > > > > > > It would be great if somebody > would point me the > > > correct arguments for object() function to find > the onjects > > > associated with it. In help file it is written > that: > > > > " envir: an alternative argument to > ‘name’ for > > > specifying the > > > > > > environment evaluation environment. Mostly > > > there for back > > > > > > compatibility" > > > > What is the wrong in my code? > > > > The easiest way to pick an item from the > search list is by > > > number: > > > > objects(3) > > > or > > > ls(3) > > > > will give you the objects in the graphics > package, with the > > > search list as above. You can also specify > the name as > > > the name argument, e.g. > > > > objects("package:base") > > > > If you want to use the envir argument > (why?), you need to > > > give an environment, not the name of one. > > > > Duncan Murdoch > > > > > > > > > > ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.