This question is stemming from the following data.table
bug report - #4978, but I'm going to use a data.frame
example to illustrate that this is not a data.table
specific issue:
Consider the following:
df = data.frame(a = 1, hø = 1)
identical(names(df), c("a", "hø"))
#[1] TRUE
.Internal(inspect(names(df)))
#@0x0000000007b27458 16 STRSXP g0c2 [NAM(2)] (len=2, tl=0)
# @0x000000000ee604c0 09 CHARSXP g1c1 [MARK,gp=0x61] [ASCII] [cached] "a"
# @0x0000000007cfa910 09 CHARSXP g0c1 [gp=0x21] [cached] "hø"
.Internal(inspect(c("a", "hø")))
#@0x0000000007b274c8 16 STRSXP g0c2 [] (len=2, tl=0)
# @0x000000000ee604c0 09 CHARSXP g1c1 [MARK,gp=0x61] [ASCII] [cached] "a"
# @0x0000000007cfa970 09 CHARSXP g0c1 [gp=0x24,ATT] [latin1] [cached] "hø"
Notice, that even though identical
thinks the two are identical, the underlying string cache stores the "hø" in two different places, while storing the "a" in one. What is happening? Is this an R string-caching bug?
And the reason this matters is that %chin%
fails here (because of the above discrepancy):
library(data.table)
"a" %chin% names(df)
#[1] TRUE
"hø" %chin% names(df)
#[1] FALSE
data.table
package maintainer. While I am curious to know the answer too, I doubt that this counts as an R bug because R (presumably) doesn't make any guarantees to the user about how/where it stores strings ... presumably it's not an accident that you used"hø"
as your example -- does this happen repeatably if and only if you consider non-ASCII characters?names(df)[2] <- "hø"; "hø" %chin% names(df)
. Maybe it's got something to do with howdata.frame
treats names...%chin%
andchmatch
behaviour) has been fixed in 1.8.11 (commit 976).