On 19 Nov 2018, at 22:32 , peter dalgaard <pdalgd at gmail.com> wrote:
If it was just about args evaluation, then the slowness would be in the list() call, no?
An accidental deparse of a large structure could well be the culprit.
-pd
On 19 Nov 2018, at 18:53 , Gabor Grothendieck <ggrothendieck at gmail.com> wrote:
The do.call version evaluates all arguments while the normal version
may not depending on the function. There could also be a difference
if the function uses non-standard evaluation since in that case the
two could be passing different different argument values.
For an example of the second case,
f <- function(x) deparse(substitute(x))
f(pi)
## [1] "pi"
do.call("f", list(pi))
## [1] "3.14159265358979"
On Mon, Nov 19, 2018 at 11:50 AM Paul Buerkner <paul.buerkner at gmail.com> wrote:
Hi all,
today, I stumbled upon a puzzling (to me) problem apparently related to
do.call() that resulted
in an efficiency drop of multiple orders of magnitudes compared to just
calling the function directly (multiple minutes as compared to one second).
That is
fun(a = a, b = b, c = c, ...)
took one second, while
args <- list(a = a, b = b, c = c, ...)
do.call(fun, args)
took multiple minutes.
In my package (brms), I use do.call in various places but only in one it
resulted in this
efficiency drop.
Before I try to make a reproducible example, I wanted to ask if there are
any known issues
with do.call that may explain this?
Paul
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