lst() constructs a list, similar to base::list(), but with some of the
same features as tibble(). lst() builds components sequentially. When
defining a component, you can refer to components created earlier in the
call. lst() also generates missing names automatically.
See rlang::list2() for a simpler and faster alternative without tibble's
evaluation and auto-name semantics.
lst(...)
| ... | < Arguments are evaluated sequentially.
You can refer to previously created elements directly or using the .data
pronoun.
To refer explicitly to objects in the calling environment, use |
|---|
A named list.
#> $n #> [1] 5 #> #> $x #> [1] 0.2220037 0.1208247 0.5305426 0.7951219 0.3532806 #>#> $`1:3` #> [1] 1 2 3 #> #> $z #> [1] "d" "e" "f" #> #> $`runif(3)` #> [1] 0.9371862 0.6326068 0.6565604 #>a <- 1:3 b <- letters[4:6] lst(a, b)#> $a #> [1] 1 2 3 #> #> $b #> [1] "d" "e" "f" #># pre-formed quoted expressions can be used with lst() and then # unquoted (with !!) or unquoted and spliced (with !!!) n1 <- 2 n2 <- 3 n_stuff <- quote(n1 + n2) x_stuff <- quote(seq_len(n)) lst(!!!list(n = n_stuff, x = x_stuff))#> $n #> [1] 5 #> #> $x #> [1] 1 2 3 4 5 #>lst(n = !!n_stuff, x = !!x_stuff)#> $n #> [1] 5 #> #> $x #> [1] 1 2 3 4 5 #>lst(n = 4, x = !!x_stuff)#> $n #> [1] 4 #> #> $x #> [1] 1 2 3 4 #>#> $n #> [1] 2 #> #> $x #> [1] 1 2 #>