ODS_OpenExposureData
magrittr
ODS_OpenExposureData | magrittr | |
---|---|---|
2 | 10 | |
57 | 951 | |
- | 0.0% | |
5.9 | 2.3 | |
1 day ago | about 1 year ago | |
Python | R | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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ODS_OpenExposureData
- Does it ever get to you that we will NEVER have the same opportunity those before us did?
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Six programming languages I’d like to see
RMS never played nice on interoperability. I wouldn’t bet on the CDL to become a useful standard, because it is under-powered, under-specified and stagnant.
The “open” alternative is OASIS. Their Open Exposure Data standard [1] is complete and supported by many industry participants. Unfortunately it’s a database based format, rather than a text based DSL, but still betterthan the alternatives.
[1] https://github.com/OasisLMF/OpenDataStandards/tree/master/Op...
magrittr
- This is not a pipe - René Magritte
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Six programming languages I’d like to see
R (yes, the statistics language) has exactly this.
You can literally extract the body of a function as a list of "call" objects (which are themselves just dressed-up lists of symbols), inject/delete/modify individual statements, and then re-cast your new list to a new function object.
I don't know why the original devs thought this was necessary or even desirable in a statistics package, but it turns out to be a lot of fun to program with. It has also made possible a wide variety of clever and elegant custom syntaxes, such as a pipe infix operator implemented as a 3rd-party library without any custom language extensions [0]. The pipe infix operator got so popular that it was eventually made part of the language core syntax in version 4.1 [1].
[0]: https://magrittr.tidyverse.org/
[1]: https://www.r-bloggers.com/2021/05/the-new-r-pipe/
- Hadley is pro- base pipe.
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Functional pipes in python like %>% from R's magrittr
In R (thanks to magrittr) you can now perform operations with a more functional piping syntax via %>%. This means that instead of coding this:
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Question about dot notation
Try reading the documentation for magrittr.
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When did WG21 decide this is what networking looks like?
Related note: the statistical programming language R has a library named magrittr to support the pipe operator.
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How can I find the data entry of the row after one found?
About the pipe (%>%) symbol, it's provided by the magrittr package. The package documentation details how to use the pipe operator.
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Best practice for chaining nested functions?
I was wondering what some good ways are to handle nested function calls without chaining them in long, ugly nested statements. I am looking for functionality similar to the pipe forward operator %>% in magrittr/R or |> in F#.
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I much prefer `data.action()` to `action(data). Is it an r/unpopularopinion?
You may like R: https://magrittr.tidyverse.org
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What's so "tidy" about tidyverse?
Agreed on everything else you said (especially the type safety stuff, it massively helps in production), but one correction: magrittr is absolutely in the tidyverse suite. It's not considered one of its "core" packages that it visibly tells you it loads, but magrittr is loaded when calling library(tidyverse) and development of the package is handled by the tidyverse team under their Github account: https://github.com/tidyverse/magrittr
What are some alternatives?
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