array_branch()
and array_tree()
enable arrays to be
used with purrr's functionals by turning them into lists. The
details of the coercion are controlled by the margin
argument. array_tree()
creates an hierarchical list (a tree)
that has as many levels as dimensions specified in margin
,
while array_branch()
creates a flat list (by analogy, a
branch) along all mentioned dimensions.
Arguments
- array
An array to coerce into a list.
- margin
A numeric vector indicating the positions of the indices to be to be enlisted. If
NULL
, a full margin is used. Ifnumeric(0)
, the array as a whole is wrapped in a list.
Details
When no margin is specified, all dimensions are used by
default. When margin
is a numeric vector of length zero, the
whole array is wrapped in a list.
Examples
# We create an array with 3 dimensions
x <- array(1:12, c(2, 2, 3))
# A full margin for such an array would be the vector 1:3. This is
# the default if you don't specify a margin
# Creating a branch along the full margin is equivalent to
# as.list(array) and produces a list of size length(x):
array_branch(x) |> str()
#> List of 12
#> $ : int 1
#> $ : int 2
#> $ : int 3
#> $ : int 4
#> $ : int 5
#> $ : int 6
#> $ : int 7
#> $ : int 8
#> $ : int 9
#> $ : int 10
#> $ : int 11
#> $ : int 12
# A branch along the first dimension yields a list of length 2
# with each element containing a 2x3 array:
array_branch(x, 1) |> str()
#> List of 2
#> $ : int [1:2, 1:3] 1 3 5 7 9 11
#> $ : int [1:2, 1:3] 2 4 6 8 10 12
# A branch along the first and third dimensions yields a list of
# length 2x3 whose elements contain a vector of length 2:
array_branch(x, c(1, 3)) |> str()
#> List of 6
#> $ : int [1:2] 1 3
#> $ : int [1:2] 2 4
#> $ : int [1:2] 5 7
#> $ : int [1:2] 6 8
#> $ : int [1:2] 9 11
#> $ : int [1:2] 10 12
# Creating a tree from the full margin creates a list of lists of
# lists:
array_tree(x) |> str()
#> List of 2
#> $ :List of 2
#> ..$ :List of 3
#> .. ..$ : int 1
#> .. ..$ : int 5
#> .. ..$ : int 9
#> ..$ :List of 3
#> .. ..$ : int 3
#> .. ..$ : int 7
#> .. ..$ : int 11
#> $ :List of 2
#> ..$ :List of 3
#> .. ..$ : int 2
#> .. ..$ : int 6
#> .. ..$ : int 10
#> ..$ :List of 3
#> .. ..$ : int 4
#> .. ..$ : int 8
#> .. ..$ : int 12
# The ordering and the depth of the tree are controlled by the
# margin argument:
array_tree(x, c(3, 1)) |> str()
#> List of 3
#> $ :List of 2
#> ..$ : int [1:2] 1 3
#> ..$ : int [1:2] 2 4
#> $ :List of 2
#> ..$ : int [1:2] 5 7
#> ..$ : int [1:2] 6 8
#> $ :List of 2
#> ..$ : int [1:2] 9 11
#> ..$ : int [1:2] 10 12