call Function CallsCreate or test for objects of mode "call" (or "(", see Details).
call(name, ...) is.call(x) as.call(x)
name | a non-empty character string naming the function to be called. |
... | arguments to be part of the call. |
x | an arbitrary R object. |
call returns an unevaluated function call, that is, an unevaluated expression which consists of the named function applied to the given arguments (name must be a string which gives the name of a function to be called). Note that although the call is unevaluated, the arguments ... are evaluated.
call is a primitive, so the first argument is taken as name and the remaining arguments as arguments for the constructed call: if the first argument is named the name must partially match name.
is.call is used to determine whether x is a call (i.e., of mode "call" or "("). Note that
is.call(x) is strictly equivalent to typeof(x) == "language".
is.language() is also true for calls (but also for symbols and expressions where is.call() is false).
as.call(x): Objects of mode "list" can be coerced to mode "call". The first element of the list becomes the function part of the call, so should be a function or the name of one (as a symbol; a character string will not do).
If you think of using as.call(<string>), consider using str2lang(*) which is an efficient version of parse(text=*). Note that call() and as.call(), when applicable, are much preferable to these parse() based approaches.
All three are primitive functions.
as.call is generic: you can write methods to handle specific classes of objects, see InternalMethods.
call should not be used to attempt to evade restrictions on the use of .Internal and other non-API calls.
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
do.call for calling a function by name and argument list; Recall for recursive calling of functions; further is.language, expression, function.
Producing calls etc from character: str2lang and parse.
is.call(call) #-> FALSE: Functions are NOT calls
## set up a function call to round with argument 10.5
cl <- call("round", 10.5)
is.call(cl) # TRUE
cl
identical(quote(round(10.5)), # <- less functional, but the same
cl) # TRUE
## such a call can also be evaluated.
eval(cl) # [1] 10
class(cl) # "call"
typeof(cl)# "language"
is.call(cl) && is.language(cl) # always TRUE for "call"s
A <- 10.5
call("round", A) # round(10.5)
call("round", quote(A)) # round(A)
f <- "round"
call(f, quote(A)) # round(A)
## if we want to supply a function we need to use as.call or similar
f <- round
## Not run: call(f, quote(A)) # error: first arg must be character
(g <- as.call(list(f, quote(A))))
eval(g)
## alternatively but less transparently
g <- list(f, quote(A))
mode(g) <- "call"
g
eval(g)
## see also the examples in the help for do.call
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