When I print something directly to the console (type some variable name, such as x
, rather than using the print function print(x)
), I'd like it to print differently from the way that it normally prints. My idea is that the printing is done by some function. If that's the case, all I have to do is replace that function with a function of my own. However, I cannot figure out what the internal function that does the printing is.
Here is what I've tried so far.
.real_cat = cat
cat = function(x) .real_cat("*** cat ***", x, "
")
cat(2345)
2345 # no
Printing to console is not done via cat
. What about print
?
.real_print = print
print = function(x) .real_cat("*** print ***", x, "
")
print(2345)
2345 # no
"hello" # no
I(2345) # yes
Some classes, like AsIs
, are printed to console via print
, but others, like numeric
or character
are not. :-(
c("print.numeric", "print.character", "print.AsIs", "print.default") %in% methods("print")
# FALSE FALSE TRUE TRUE
Turns out print
doesn't even have a separate method for printing numeric
or character
. Classes that have a print
method are printed to the console using print
. But classes that do not have a print
method are not. Maybe they are printed using the default
method?
print.default = function(x) .real_cat("*** print.default ***", x, "
")
print.default(2345)
2345 # no
"hello" # no
No.
Maybe if I define a method for numeric, then it will print it using that method?
print.numeric = function(x) .real_cat("*** print.numeric ***", x, "
")
print.numeric(2345)
2345 # no
print.character = function(x) .real_cat("*** print.character ***", x, "
")
print.character("hello")
"hello" # no
Here is where I get stuck. I cannot figure out any way to have some basic classes like numeric
or character
print out directly to console using my own print function.
If this helps, here is the reason that I want to do this. I am writing a package to pretty-print values (https://github.com/prettyprint/prettyprint). Too many times, the output of an analysis is too hard to read, and therefore understand. Yes, you can make it pretty using format
, signif
, and round
, and that's basically what the package already does for you in the background.
I would like to make pretty-printing as easy as possible for the user. At this point, they have to call my pretty-print function (pp(x)
). I'd like to play around with giving the user the option to have the result pretty print automatically. (I would print both the non-pretty and the pretty version of the value, to make sure nothing is lost in the prettifying.)
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