Thanks Duncan.
But my question was how to extract
simply the function value from value,
without the gradient attribute?
I see that things like value<2 give the right answer.
I was curiosity. I found now that value[1]
gives strips the attributes from value:
------
> value
[1] 1
attr(,"gradient")
[1] 2
> value[1]
[1] 1
------
Is that the way?
Gerrit
On 12/29/2014 05:05 PM, Duncan Murdoch wrote:
On 29/12/2014 10:32 AM, Gerrit Draisma wrote:
Just a curiosity question:
In the documentation for the nlm procedure
a find this example of defining a function
with a gradient attribute:
-----------
f <- function(x, a)
{
res <- sum((x-a)^2)
attr(res, "gradient") <- 2*(x-a)
res
}
-----------
I get the gradient with
attr(f(3,2),"gradient")
but how do I get the function value it self?
value <- f(3,2)
gradient <- attr(value, "gradient")
Duncan Murdoch
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