Suppose all of your S4 methods associated to a specific S4 generic function/method share a formal argument that is supposed to have a specific default value. Intuitively, I would state such an argument in the definition of the S4 generic (as opposed to stating it in each method definition which would seem somewhat redundant to me).
However, I noticed that this way I'm running into trouble as it seems that the default value of the formal argument is not dispatched to the methods and thus an error is thrown.
Isn't this somewhat against the idea of having a combination of a generic and methods? Why would I have to state the formal argument in each method separately again when the default value is always the same? Can I explicitly dispatch formal arguments' default values somehow?
Below you'll find a short illustration of the behavior
Generic function
setGeneric(
name="testFoo",
signature=c("x", "y"),
def=function(
x,
y,
do.both=FALSE,
...
) {
standardGeneric("testFoo")
}
)
Method
setMethod(
f="testFoo",
signature=signature(x="numeric", y="numeric"),
definition=function(
x,
y
) {
if (do.both) {
out <- list(x=x, y=y)
} else {
out <- x
}
return(out)
}
)
Error
> testFoo(x=1, y=2)
Error in .local(x, y, ...) : object 'do.both' not found
Redundant statement of do.both
fixes it
setMethod(
f="testFoo",
signature=signature(x="numeric", y="numeric"),
definition=function(
x,
y,
do.both=FALSE
) {
if (do.both) {
out <- list(x=x, y=y)
} else {
out <- x
}
return(out)
}
)
> testFoo(x=1, y=2)
[1] 1