EDIT: The question has changed slightly to why a specific extension doesn't work, rather than why a general method doesn't work.
As indicated by the title, I'm having trouble extending functions to other (S3) classes.
For example:
x <- y <- runif(10)
loessModel = loess(y ~ x)
methods("cor")
## [1] cor.test cor.test.default* cor.test.formula*
cor.loess = function(loessModel, ...) { cor(loessModel$x, loessModel$y, ...) }
cor(loessModel)
## Error in cor(loessModel) : supply both 'x' and 'y' or a matrix-like 'x'
However, the following works:
getCor = function(x, y, ...) { UseMethod("getCor") }
getCor.default = function(x, y, ...) { cor(x, y, ...) }
getCor.loess = function(loessModel, ...) getCor(loessModel$x, loessModel$y, ...)
getCor(loessModel)
## [,1]
## x 1
So... as explained by Josh, the first method of extending cor
didn't work because cor
isn't a generic function. The second method works, but I can't extend it to a class of LoessList
. This is puzzling to me, particularly as it works 'outside the function':
set.seed(13)
df = data.frame(id = rep.int(1:2, 10),
x = runif(20),
y = runif(20))
loessList = structure(dlply(df, "id", loess, formula = as.formula("y ~ x")),
class = "LoessList")
getCor.LoessList = function(loessList, ...) { ldply(loessList, getCor, ...) }
getCor(loessList)
## Error in is.data.frame(y) : argument "y" is missing, with no default
ldply(loessList, getCor)
## id 1
## 1 1 -0.01552707
## 2 2 -0.38997723
On a more general note, are there any good guides to OOP in R? I have been using http://logic.sysbiol.cam.ac.uk/teaching/advancedR/slides.pdf as my main point of reference, but other sources are always appreciated.
Cheers
cor
doesn't appear to be a generic function by default. When you calledmethods("cor")
notice that you were getting results forcor.test
. Sincecor
isn't a generic function it doesn't know it should dispatch the call to yourcor.loess
.https://github.com/hadley/devtools/wiki/SoftwareSystems