Another way would be the following (here an example for an 3x3-matrix):
n = 3;
GG = matrix( (1:(n+1)^2)*0, n+1, n+1);
cl = 0;
G = function(i,j){ return(GG[i+1, j+1]) }
':=' = function(GAuf,x){
cl <<- match.call();
aa = deparse(cl$GAuf);
d1 = gregexpr(pattern="\\(", aa)
d2 = gregexpr(pattern=",", aa)
s1 = d1[[1]][1] + 1;
s2 = d2[[1]][1] - 1;
i = substr(aa, s1, s2);
d1 = gregexpr(pattern=" ", aa)
d2 = gregexpr(pattern=")", aa)
s1 = d1[[1]][1]+1;
s2 = d2[[1]][1]-1;
j = substr(aa, s1, s2);
d = gregexpr(pattern="\\(", aa);
s = d[[1]][1]-1;
fn = substr(aa, 1, s);
com= paste(fn,fn, "[", i,"+1,", j,"+1]","<<-x", sep="");
eval(parse(text=com));
}
Now you can set a value by
G(0,1) := 2
and get the value by
> G(0,1)
[1] 2
Note that I used the convention that if you use a matrix named 'N' then the function ':=' expects a matrix named 'NN' (here matrix 'G' and 'GG') as you can see at the end of the function ':=' because the string 'com' is set by 'paste(fn,fn,...)'. If you want to name your matrix "hello" then you have to define a matrix "hellohello" (like matrix 'GG') and a matrix "hello" (like matrix 'G').