[Rd] predict.smooth.spline.fit and Recall() (Was: Re: Return function from function and Recall())

Henrik Bengtsson hb at maths.lth.se
Wed Apr 5 16:17:37 CEST 2006


On 4/5/06, Prof Brian Ripley <ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk> wrote:
> On Wed, 5 Apr 2006, Henrik Bengtsson wrote:
>
> > On 4/5/06, Prof Brian Ripley <ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk> wrote:
> >> On Wed, 5 Apr 2006, Henrik Bengtsson wrote:
> >>
> >>> Hi,
> >>>
> >>> forget about the below details.  It is not related to the fact that
> >>> the function is returned from a function.  Sorry about that.  I've
> >>> been troubleshooting soo much I've been shoting over the target.  Here
> >>> is a much smaller reproducible example:
> >>>
> >>> x <- 1:10
> >>> y <- 1:10 + rnorm(length(x))
> >>> sp <- smooth.spline(x=x, y=y)
> >>> ypred <- predict(sp$fit, x)
> >>> # [1]  2.325181  2.756166  ...
> >>> ypred2 <- predict(sp$fit, c(0,x))
> >>> # Error in Recall(object, xrange) : couldn't find
> >>> # function "predict.smooth.spline.fit"
> >>
> >> It seems Recall is not searching (via findFun) from the right environment,
> >> but at a quick glance it is not obvious to me why.
> >> You can replace Recall by predict.smooth.spline.fit for now.
> >
> > More troubleshooting shows that by dispatching directly on 'sp' and
> > not 'sp$fit' works.  The reason that I do not want to do this is
> > related to my questions yesterday that I want to keep the memory usage
> > down and 'sp' hold quite some extra data even with keep.data=FALSE.
>
> Ahah!  So you are not using this as intended, and I had not spotted this.

Neither did I ;)

> Now I understand: you are calling predict, which finds
> predict.smooth.spline.fit via method registration, and dispatches it in
> the environment used to call predict, .GlobalEnv, where of course it is
> not visible. Then Recall uses that environment, but attempts to call the
> method directly.
>
> If you call this as intended, predict is called from the body of
> predict.smooth.spline where predict.smooth.spline.fit is visible.
>
> I am afraid that you should not be expecting to be able to subvert things
> this way.

One could argue that it should not be possible to dispatch to a
non-exported method the way I did.  If UseMethod() would use the same
search path as the calling expression in the parent frame (and not
from "within" the environment where the generic function lives), then
the predict() would fail right away.  However, I think it is a very
risky business to make such modifications to UseMethod(), because
there are probably unknown side effects to this.

/Henrik

> [...]
>
> Now, I was a little surprised that Recall() needed to do a lookup, but R's
> context only contains the name of the called function and not (a pointer
> to) the function.
>
> --
> Brian D. Ripley,                  ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk
> Professor of Applied Statistics,  http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~ripley/
> University of Oxford,             Tel:  +44 1865 272861 (self)
> 1 South Parks Road,                     +44 1865 272866 (PA)
> Oxford OX1 3TG, UK                Fax:  +44 1865 272595
>
>


--
Henrik Bengtsson
Mobile: +46 708 909208 (+2h UTC)



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