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user>rmr>Keyval types and combinations
First a table to categorize keyval pairs. Keys and values fall in three categories: NULL, not-NULL but 0-length ("length" in the rmr sense, that is nrow
for matrices and data frames, length
otherwise) and the "normal case" (not-NULL, length greater than 0).
key/val | NULL | 0-length such as integer(0) | length > 0 |
NULL | keyval(NULL, NULL) | keyval(NULL, NULL) | NULL keys |
0-length such as integer(0) | keyval(NULL, NULL) | keyval(NULL, NULL) | NO |
length > 0 | NO | NO | normal case |
The idea is that keys and values need to be the same length or rmr2 will try to use recycling to achieve that, and recycling fails on zero-length arguments. The only exception is NULL keys with non-zero length values, which means "keys omitted". Typical use is map only jobs, or input to the map function. When paired with NULL or 0-length values, that creates an empty keyval
pair, otherwise a keyval pair with values but NULL keys. When the keys are not-NULL 0-length, values must be too and the two form an empty keyval pair. When the keys are non-zero length, the values should as well. So we have three categories of keyval pairs, 0-length (or empty), NULL keys and non-zero-length values (NULL keys hereafter), and non-zero-length everything (normal case hereafter). Can we mix and match them as argument to c.keyval and as return values from map and reduce? This is answered in the following table.
c.keyval | 0-length | NULL keys | normal case |
0-length | 0-length | NULL keys | normal case |
NULL keys | NULL keys | NO | |
normal case | normal case |
It is symmetric and can be summarized as follow:
- 0-length is the neutral element and can be combined with every other type
- each type can be combined with the same type (diagonal)
- NULL keys can not be combined with the normal case.