5

I have a function that needs to expect a formula as an input, in the form of y~x, for example. Then, I need to pass a series of x-values into that formula to get out the y's.

For example, if my formula is y~x^2, and my series of x-values is (1,2,3,4), then I should expect (1,4,9,16) as output.

Say I have the formula like this: formula1 <- y~x:

Here's what I've tried thus far:

  • Converting the formula into a function: as.function(formula1)
  • Using model.frame and model.matrix like so:

Like so:

formula1 <- y~x^2 
x <- c(1,2,3,4)
my_data <- data.frame("x" = x, "y" = rep(0,length(x))) 
model_frame <- model.frame(formula1, data = my_data)
my_design_matrix <- model.matrix(formula1, model_frame)
  • I tried using nls2, but I don't have any parameters to optimize, so I don't see the point.

What can I use for this?

Here are the resources I consulted:
How to apply a formula to a vector in R?

Pass formula to function in R?

2 Answers 2

5

I'm not sure if this is the most elegant way but it should do as you require:

The idea is to extract the right hand side of the formula object and parse it as a string. The result then may be evaluated.

as.function <- function(formula) {
    cmd <- tail(as.character(formula),1)
    exp <- parse(text=cmd)
    function(...) eval(exp, list(...))
}

Note however that there are valid formulas that may not be evaluated this way, for example y ~ a:c.

which gives us

> f <- as.function(y ~ x^2)
> f(x=1:10)
 [1]   1   4   9  16  25  36  49  64  81 100

If you like to submit a data.frame to the generated function you could just do

as.function <- function(formula) {
    cmd <- tail(as.character(formula),1)
    exp <- parse(text=cmd)
    function(df) eval(exp, df)
}

and get

> f <- as.function(y ~ x^2)
> f(data.frame(x=1:10))
 [1]   1   4   9  16  25  36  49  64  81 100
0
1

purrr::as_mapper maps one sided formulas to functions:

fn <- as_mapper(~ .^2)
fn(2) # gives 4 

as_mapper(\(x){x^2}) also works so you can create functions that take formulas or functions.

my_func <- \(x,fn){ as_mapper(fn)(x) }
my_func(2,~.^2)      # gives 4
my_func(2,\(x){x^2}) # gives 4

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.