Long vectors: Missing values and R_xlen_t?
On Mon, Sep 21, 2015 at 11:20 AM, Simon Urbanek
<simon.urbanek at r-project.org> wrote:
On Sep 20, 2015, at 3:06 PM, Henrik Bengtsson <henrik.bengtsson at ucsf.edu> wrote:
Is there a missing value constant defined for R_xlen_t, cf. NA_INTEGER (== R_NaInt == INT_MIN) for int(eger)? If not, is it correct to assume that missing values should be taken care/tested for before coercing from int or double?
R_xlen_t is type of the vector length (see XLENGTH()) and as such never holds a missing value (since there is no such thing as a missing length). It is *not* a native type for R vectors and therefore there is no official representation of NAs in R_xlen_t.
Although native R vectors can be used as indices, the way it typically works is that the code first checks for NAs in the R vector and only then converts to R_xlen_t, so the NA value is never stored in R_xlen_t even for indexing.
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That said, when converting packages from "legacy" .Call code before long vector support which used asInteger() to convert an index I tend to use this utility for convenience:
static R_INLINE R_xlen_t asLength(SEXP x, R_xlen_t NA) {
double d;
if (TYPEOF(x) == INTSXP && LENGTH(x) > 0) {
int res = INTEGER(x)[0];
return (res == NA_INTEGER) ? NA : ((R_xlen_t) res);
}
d = asReal(x);
return (R_finite(d)) ? ((R_xlen_t) d) : NA;
}
Note that this explicitly allows the caller to specify NA representation since it depends on the use - often it's simply 0, other times -1 will do since typically anything negative is equally bad. As noted above, this is not what R itself does, so it's more of a convenience to simplify conversion of legacy code.
Thank you Simon, all this helped clarify it for me. It's in line with what I suspected, but it is really useful to hear it from the "officials". Cheers, Henrik
Cheers, Simon