One can use deparse(substitute())
combination to extract the parameter name inside the function like this function
names_from_dots <- function(...) {
deparse(substitute(...))
}
data(iris)
data(swiss)
names_from_dots(iris)
#[1] "iris"
names_from_dots(swiss)
#[1] "swiss"
extracts the name of a data.frame passed in ...
(dots) parameter.
But how can one extract every name of passed multiple data.frames
names_from_dots(swiss, iris)
[1] "swiss"
names_from_dots(iris, swiss)
[1] "iris"
When this only returns the name of the first object.
I wouldn’t use substitute
here at all, it works badly with ...
1. Instead, you can just capture the unevaluated dots using:
dots = match.call(expand.dots = FALSE)$...
Then you can get the arguments inside the dots:
sapply(dots, deparse)
1 Part of the reason is, I think, that substitute
does completely different things when called with (a) an argument (which is a “promise” object) or (b) another object. ...
falls somewhere in between these two.
You can try the following:
names_from_dots <- function(...) sapply(substitute(list(...))[-1], deparse)
names_from_dots(swiss, iris)
# [1] "swiss" "iris"
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