assertthat provides a drop in replacement for stopifnot()
that makes it easy to check the pre- and post-conditions of a function, while producing useful error messages.
x <- 1:10
stopifnot(is.character(x))
# Error: is.character(x) is not TRUE
assert_that(is.character(x))
# Error: x is not a character vector
assert_that(length(x) == 5)
# Error: length(x) not equal to 5
assert_that(is.numeric(x))
# [1] TRUE
This is a good defensive programming technique, and is useful as source-code documentation: you can see exactly what your function expects when you come back to it in the future. It is partly a response to the lack of static typing in R, but it allows you to test for general conditions (like length(x) == length(y)
) that are difficult to express in a type system.
assertthat
can be installed either from CRAN:
or with devtools:
As well as all the functions provided by R, assertthat provides a few more that I use a lot:
is.flag(x)
: is x TRUE
or FALSE
? (a boolean flag)is.string(x)
: is x a length 1 character vector?has_name(x, nm)
, x %has_name% nm
: does x
have component nm
?has_attr(x, attr)
, x %has_attr% attr
: does x
have attribute attr
?is.count(x)
: is x a single positive integer?are_equal(x, y)
: are x
and y
equal?not_empty(x)
: are all dimensions of x
greater than 0?noNA(x)
: is x
free from missing values?is.dir(path)
: is path
a directory?is.writeable(path)
/is.readable(path)
: is path
writeable/readable?has_extension(path, extension)
: does file
have given extension
?assert_that
, see_if
and validate_that
There are three main functions in assertthat:
assert_that()
signal an error
see_if()
returns a logical value, with the error message as an attribute.
validate_that()
returns TRUE
on success, otherwise returns the error as a string.
You’ll use assert_that()
in your own code, but you’ll mostly see see_if()
in the examples (because R CMD check
requires that examples run without errors). Use validate_that()
for S4 validate methods.
If you’re writing your own assertions, you can provide custom error messages using the on_failure()
helper:
is_odd <- function(x) {
assert_that(is.numeric(x), length(x) == 1)
x %% 2 == 1
}
assert_that(is_odd(2))
# Error: is_odd(x = 2) is not TRUE
on_failure(is_odd) <- function(call, env) {
paste0(deparse(call$x), " is even")
}
assert_that(is_odd(2))
# Error: 2 is even
The on_failure
callback is called with two arguments, the unevaluated function call
(which has already been standardised with match.call()
), and env
, and the environment in which the assertion was executed. This allows you to choose between displaying values or names in your error messages. Read the advanced R book to learn more about working with calls.
Also note the use of assert_that()
in our new function: assertions flow through function calls ensuring that you get a useful error message at the top level: