[Rd] rbind has confusing result for custom sub-class (possible bug?)

Joshua Ulrich jo@h@m@u|r|ch @end|ng |rom gm@||@com
Mon May 27 16:25:00 CEST 2019


On Sun, May 26, 2019 at 6:47 AM Joshua Ulrich <josh.m.ulrich using gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Sun, May 26, 2019 at 4:06 AM Michael Chirico
> <michaelchirico4 using gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Have finally managed to come up with a fix after checking out sys.calls()
> > from within the as.Date.IDate debugger, which shows something like:
> >
> > [[1]] rbind(DF, DF)
> > [[2]] rbind(deparse.level, ...)
> > [[3]] `[<-`(`*tmp*`, ri, value = 18042L)
> > [[4]] `[<-.Date`(`*tmp*`, ri, value = 18042L)
> > [[5]] as.Date(value)
> > [[6]] as.Date.IDate(value)
> >
> > I'm not sure why [<- is called, I guess the implementation is to assign to
> > the output block by block? Anyway, we didn't have a [<- method. And
> > [<-.Date looks like:
> >
> > value <- unclass(as.Date(value)) # <- converts to double
> > .Date(NextMethod(.Generic), oldClass(x)) # <- restores 'IDate' class
> >
> > So we can fix our bug by defining a [<- class; the question that I still
> > don't see answered in documentation or source code is, why/where is [<-
> > called, exactly?
> >
> Your rbind(DF, DF) call dispatches to base::rbind.data.frame().  The
> `[<-` call is this line:
> value[[jj]][ri] <- if (is.factor(xij)) as.vector(xij) else xij
>
> That's where the storage.mode changes from integer to double.
>
> debug: value[[jj]][ri] <- if (is.factor(xij)) as.vector(xij) else xij
> Browse[2]>
> debug: xij
> Browse[2]> storage.mode(xij)
> [1] "integer"
> Browse[2]> value[[jj]][ri]
> [1] "2019-05-26"
> Browse[2]> storage.mode(value[[jj]][ri])
> [1] "integer"
> Browse[2]>
> debug: if (!is.null(nm <- names(xij))) names(value[[jj]])[ri] <- nm
> Browse[2]> storage.mode(value[[jj]][ri])
> [1] "double"
>
To be clear, I don't think this is a bug in rbind() or
rbind.data.frame().  The confusion is that rbind.data.frame() calls
`[<-` for each column of the data.frame, and there is no `[<-.IDate`
method.  So the parent class method is dispatched, which converts the
storage mode to double.

Someone may argue that this is an issue with `[<-.Date`, and that it
shouldn't convert the storage.mode from integer to double.
>
> > Mike C
> >
> > On Sun, May 26, 2019 at 1:16 PM Michael Chirico <michaelchirico4 using gmail.com>
> > wrote:
> >
> > > Debugging this issue:
> > >
> > > https://github.com/Rdatatable/data.table/issues/2008
> > >
> > > We have custom class 'IDate' which inherits from 'Date' (it just forces
> > > integer storage for efficiency, hence, I).
> > >
> > > The concatenation done by rbind, however, breaks this and returns a double:
> > >
> > > library(data.table)
> > > DF = data.frame(date = as.IDate(Sys.Date()))
> > > storage.mode(rbind(DF, DF)$date)
> > > # [1] "double"
> > >
> > > This is specific to base::rbind (data.table's rbind returns an integer as
> > > expected); in ?rbind we see:
> > >
> > > The method dispatching is not done via UseMethod(), but by C-internal
> > > dispatching. Therefore there is no need for, e.g., rbind.default.
> > > The dispatch algorithm is described in the source file
> > > (‘.../src/main/bind.c’) as
> > > 1. For each argument we get the list of possible class memberships from
> > > the class attribute.
> > > 2. *We inspect each class in turn to see if there is an applicable
> > > method.*
> > > 3. If we find an applicable method we make sure that it is identical to
> > > any method determined for prior arguments. If it is identical, we proceed,
> > > otherwise we immediately drop through to the default code.
> > >
> > > It's not clear what #2 means -- an applicable method *for what*? Glancing
> > > at the source code would suggest it's looking for rbind.IDate:
> > >
> > > https://github.com/wch/r-source/blob/trunk/src/main/bind.c#L1051-L1063
> > >
> > > const char *generic = ((PRIMVAL(op) == 1) ? "cbind" : "rbind"); // should
> > > be rbind here
> > > const char *s = translateChar(STRING_ELT(classlist, i)); // iterating over
> > > the classes, should get to IDate first
> > > sprintf(buf, "%s.%s", generic, s); // should be rbind.IDate
> > >
> > > but adding this method (or even exporting it) is no help [ simply defining
> > > rbind.IDate = function(...) as.IDate(NextMethod()) ]
> > >
> > > Lastly, it appears that as.Date.IDate is called, which is causing the type
> > > conversion:
> > >
> > > debug(data.table:::as.Date.IDate)
> > > rbind(DF, DF) # launches debugger
> > > x
> > > # [1] "2019-05-26" <-- singleton, so apparently applied to DF$date, not
> > > c(DF$date, DF$date)
> > > undebug(data.table:::as.Date.IDate)
> > >
> > > I can't really wrap my head around why as.Date is being called here, and
> > > even allowing that, why the end result is still the original class [
> > > class(rbind(DF, DF)$date) == c('IDate', 'Date') ]
> > >
> > > So, I'm beginning to think this might be a bug. Am I missing something?
> > >
> >
> >         [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
> >
> > ______________________________________________
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> > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
>
>
>
> --
> Joshua Ulrich  |  about.me/joshuaulrich
> FOSS Trading  |  www.fosstrading.com
> R/Finance 2019 | www.rinfinance.com



-- 
Joshua Ulrich  |  about.me/joshuaulrich
FOSS Trading  |  www.fosstrading.com
R/Finance 2019 | www.rinfinance.com



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