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@richfitz
Created July 8, 2014 07:16
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## Empty list -- just use the empty environment for this.
nil <- function() {
emptyenv()
}
## Test if a list is the empty list:
is_empty <- function(lis) {
identical(lis, nil())
}
## Lisp-style linked list with 'car' and 'cdr' addresses, built around
## an environment (giving reference semantics). Using an S3 class
## here purely for printing purposes later.
cons <- function(a, b) {
e <- new.env(parent=nil())
e$car <- a
e$cdr <- b
class(e) <- "linkedlist"
e
}
## The standard 'car' and 'cdr' addressing functions:
car <- function(lis) {
lis$car
}
cdr <- function(lis) {
lis$cdr
}
## The usual convenience functions can be built around these:
cadr <- function(lis) {
car(cdr(lis))
}
## Support for setting car/cdr is straightforward:
setcar <- function(lis, v) {
lis$car <- v
}
setcdr <- function(lis, v) {
lis$cdr <- v
}
## More R-ish
`car<-` <- function(lis, value) {
setcar(lis, value)
lis
}
`cdr<-` <- function(lis, value) {
setcdr(lis, value)
lis
}
## Convenience function for building list. So where you'd write
## '(1 2 3 4)
## with this function we'd write:
## linkedlist(1, 2, 3, 4)
linkedlist <- function(el, ...) {
if (missing(el)) {
nil()
} else {
cons(el, linkedlist(...))
}
}
## A print method. Recursive, rather than stack based (and R's stack
## is not that big) and won't create beautiful output with large input
## or with non-atomic list elements.
print.linkedlist <- function(x, ...) {
cat(sprintf("[linked list]:\n %s\n", as.character(x)))
}
## Actual workhorse done via as.character()
as.character.linkedlist <- function(x) {
head_str <- as.character(car(x))
tail <- cdr(x)
if (is_empty(tail)) {
head_str
} else {
sprintf("(%s %s)", head_str, as.character(tail))
}
}
## The above should give enough primitive support to implement usual
## functions that operate on linked lists:
insert_at <- function(new, k, lis) {
if (is_empty(lis)) {
linkedlist(new)
} else if (k == 0) {
cons(new, lis)
} else {
cons(car(lis),
insert_at(new, k-1L, cdr(lis)))
}
}
## Use:
## Construct a list of 1..4:
lis <- cons(1, cons(2, cons(3, cons(4, nil()))))
lis
car(lis) # 1
cdr(lis) # (2 (3 4))
cadr(lis) # 2
car(lis) <- -1
lis # (-1 (2 (3 4)))
## Copy the list:
lis2 <- lis
car(lis2) <- 1
lis2 # (1 (2 (3 4))) -- both the same due to shared environment
lis # (1 (2 (3 4)))
## Insert element:
lis3 <- insert_at(10, 2L, lis)
lis3 # (1 (2 (10 (3 4))))
lis # (1 (2 (3 4))) -- unchanged...
@TiagoVentura
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Quick question, maybe a stupid one, why do you need a empty environment?

@JoshuaPaulBarnard
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Quick question, maybe a stupid one, why do you need a empty environment?

My silly guess would be to make sure that the nodes are empty and exist before interacting with them.

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