Hello - Søren Højsgaard wrote: > Dear List > > A 2-dimensional array seems to be "interpreted" as a matrix whereas > higher dimensional arrays are interpreted as arrays, e.g. > >> a1 <- array(1:8,c(2,2,2)) class(a1) > [1] "array" >> a2 <- array(1:4,c(2,2)) class(a2) > [1] "matrix" >
Note that is.matrix(a2) and is.array(a2) are both TRUE though. > If I write a generic function (apologies if this is the wrong word) > on arrays as > > foo <- function(x) UseMethod("foo") foo.array <- function(x) sum(x) > > then this fails on a 2-dimensional array: > >> foo(a1) > [1] 36 >> foo(a2) > Error in UseMethod("foo") : no applicable method for "foo" > > Is there any way in which I can "force" a2 to being "interpreted" as > having class "array" rather than "matrix" so that foo will work on > a2??? I don't know about that. However, I see that both of the functions duplicated.matrix and unique.matrix are copies of duplicated.array and unique.array, respectively. Perhaps that's all you need to do? foo.matrix <- foo.array Maybe there is a better suggestion? Best, Erik Iverson ______________________________________________ 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.