Compared to the base R functions, they only inspect the type of the object, not its attributes. This means they tend to be less surprising:
```{r}
is.atomic(NULL)
is_atomic(NULL)
is.vector(factor("a"))
is_vector(factor("a"))
```
I recommend using these instead of the base functions.
Each predicate also comes with "scalar" and "bare" versions. The scalar version checks that the length is 1 and the bare version checks that the object is a bare vector with no S3 class.
```{r}
y <- factor(c("a", "b", "c"))
is_integer(y)
is_scalar_integer(y)
is_bare_integer(y)
```
### Exercises
1. Carefully read the documentation of `is.vector()`. What does it actually
Lists are the data structure R uses for hierarchical objects. You're already familiar with vectors, R's data structure for 1d objects. Lists extend these ideas to model objects that are like trees. You can create a hierarchical structure with a list because unlike vectors, a list can contain other lists.
You create a list with `list()`:
```{r}
x <- list(1, 2, 3)
str(x)
x_named <- list(a = 1, b = 2, c = 3)
str(x_named)
```
Unlike atomic vectors, `lists()` can contain a mix of objects:
```{r}
y <- list("a", 1L, 1.5, TRUE)
str(y)
```
Lists can even contain other lists!
```{r}
z <- list(list(1, 2), list(3, 4))
str(z)
```
`str()` is very helpful when looking at lists because it focusses on the structure, not the contents.
### Visualising lists
To explain more complicated list manipulation functions, it's helpful to have a visual representation of lists. For example, take these three lists:
It's easy to get confused between `[` and `[[`, but it's important to understand the difference. A few months ago I stayed at a hotel with a pretty interesting pepper shaker that I hope will help you remember these differences:
```{r, echo = FALSE, out.width = "25%"}
knitr::include_graphics("images/pepper.jpg")
```
If this pepper shaker is your list `x`, then, `x[1]` is a pepper shaker containing a single pepper packet:
```{r, echo = FALSE, out.width = "25%"}
knitr::include_graphics("images/pepper-1.jpg")
```
`x[2]` would look the same, but would contain the second packet. `x[1:2]` would be a pepper shaker containing two pepper packets.
`x[[1]]` is:
```{r, echo = FALSE, out.width = "25%"}
knitr::include_graphics("images/pepper-2.jpg")
```
If you wanted to get the content of the pepper package, you'd need `x[[1]][[1]]`:
```{r, echo = FALSE, out.width = "25%"}
knitr::include_graphics("images/pepper-3.jpg")
```
### Exercises
1. Draw the following lists as nested sets.
1. Generate the lists corresponding to these nested set diagrams.
1. What happens if you subset a data frame as if you're subsetting a list?
What are the key differences between a list and a data frame?