In R, if I create an environment and then use with
to evaluate a function in that enviroment, the function has normally access to the variables. However, if I nest functions, for some reason, they go out of scope. Can you explain to me why this is the case?
Example:
Create a new environment with a variable called x
E = new.env();
E$x = c(1,2,3)
Using with
I can print this variable:
with(E, print(x));
#[1] 1 2 3
But now if I nest this function, it no longer works:
printMe = function() { print(x); }
with(E, printMe())
#Error in print(x) : object 'x' not found
I know I can make it work again like so:
printMe = function(x) { print(x); }
with(E, printMe(x))
#[1] 1 2 3
But I don't understand -- if with
creates an environment, why can't the nested function see the x
? It works if you attach it:
attach(E)
printMe()
#[1] 1 2 3
I think I'm just missing something about scoping, but what's the recommended way of doing this? Or, to put my question another way: why can't nested functions in with
access free variables?
envir
argument and useget
instead ofprint
, for exampleprintMe <- function(envir = parent.frame()) { get("x", envir = envir) }; with(E, printMe)
This evaluatesx
in the environment one step up in the chain