Checks if an argument is a character scalar and (optionally) whether it matches
one of the provided values.
Usage
assert_character_scalar(
arg,
values = NULL,
case_sensitive = TRUE,
optional = FALSE,
arg_name = rlang::caller_arg(arg),
message = NULL,
class = "assert_character_scalar",
call = parent.frame()
)Arguments
- arg
A function argument to be checked
- Default value
none
- values
A
charactervector of valid values forarg. Values is converted to a lower case vector if case_sensitive = FALSE is used.- Default value
NULL
- case_sensitive
Should the argument be handled case-sensitive? If set to
FALSE, the argument is converted to lower case for checking the permitted values and returning the argument.- Default value
TRUE
- optional
Is the checked argument optional? If set to
FALSEandargisNULLthen an error is thrown- Default value
FALSE
- arg_name
string indicating the label/symbol of the object being checked.
- Default value
rlang::caller_arg(arg)
- message
string passed to
cli::cli_abort(message). WhenNULL, default messaging is used (see examples for default messages)."{arg_name}"can be used in messaging.- Default value
NULL
- class
Subclass of the condition.
- call
The execution environment of a currently running function, e.g.
call = caller_env(). The corresponding function call is retrieved and mentioned in error messages as the source of the error.You only need to supply
callwhen throwing a condition from a helper function which wouldn't be relevant to mention in the message.Can also be
NULLor a defused function call to respectively not display any call or hard-code a code to display.For more information about error calls, see Including function calls in error messages.
Value
The function throws an error if arg is not a character vector or if arg
is a character vector but of length > 1 or if its value is not one of the values
specified. Otherwise, the input is returned invisibly.
See also
Checks for valid input and returns warning or errors messages:
assert_atomic_vector(),
assert_character_vector(),
assert_data_frame(),
assert_date_vector(),
assert_expr(),
assert_expr_list(),
assert_filter_cond(),
assert_function(),
assert_integer_scalar(),
assert_list_element(),
assert_list_of(),
assert_logical_scalar(),
assert_named(),
assert_numeric_vector(),
assert_one_to_one(),
assert_param_does_not_exist(),
assert_s3_class(),
assert_same_type(),
assert_symbol(),
assert_unit(),
assert_vars(),
assert_varval_list()
Examples
example_fun <- function(msg_type) {
assert_character_scalar(msg_type, values = c("warning", "error"))
}
example_fun("warning")
try(example_fun("message"))
#> Error in example_fun("message") :
#> Argument `msg_type` must be equal to one of "warning" or "error".
try(example_fun(TRUE))
#> Error in example_fun(TRUE) :
#> Argument `msg_type` must be a scalar of class <character>, but is
#> `TRUE`.
# handling arguments case-insensitive
example_fun2 <- function(msg_type) {
msg_type <- assert_character_scalar(
msg_type,
values = c("warning", "error"),
case_sensitive = FALSE
)
if (msg_type == "warning") {
print("A warning was requested.")
}
}
example_fun2("Warning")
#> [1] "A warning was requested."
