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One thing that might be nice is to add a flag for exiting the @chain block.
One workflow I use at the REPL is to have a big block that I add to a bunch. But if I wrote a bug that is an an intermediate location, I want to be able to go to that spot.
here is a big block
julia> df = @chain begin
map(1:10) do i
@addnt begin
@add apartment_id = rand(1:4)
@add move_date = rand(dates)
@add action_type = rand(["move_in", "move_out"])
end
end
DataFrame
@aside begin
move_ins = DataFrame(apartment_id = [1, 2, 3, 4], move_date = Date(2010, 01, 01), action_type = fill("move_in", 4))
end
vcat(move_ins, _)
@orderby :apartment_id :move_date
@transform diff_from_action = ifelse.(:action_type .== "move_in", 1, -1)
groupby(:apartment_id)
@transform num_people_in_apartment_after_action = cumsum(:diff_from_action)
groupby(:apartment_id)
@transform cols(AsTable) = begin
@addnt begin
@add start_dates = :move_date
@add end_dates = lead(:move_date)
end
end
end
What if I think I created diff_from_action wrong? To get to the the chain at exactly that place, I would have to delete or comment out a lot of stuff. Or add an end and face a bunch of errors.
But if I could just add an @exit flag right after the diff_from_action command, I could just forget about all the stuff after.
This would solve one thing that made me hesitant about @chain earlier. One benefit of the %>% in dplyr was that it was easy to break out of the chain and return what you wanted.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
I think this is a good idea. I wonder if it needs to be a little more obvious than just @exit but maybe @EXIT or something so that looking through a chain with an early break one can immediately spot that it has been interrupted for debugging purposes. I suppose such a feature might be programmatically used for flow control. Something like ((sum(_.A) > x) && @exit).
One thing that might be nice is to add a flag for exiting the
@chain
block.One workflow I use at the REPL is to have a big block that I add to a bunch. But if I wrote a bug that is an an intermediate location, I want to be able to go to that spot.
here is a big block
What if I think I created
diff_from_action
wrong? To get to the the chain at exactly that place, I would have to delete or comment out a lot of stuff. Or add anend
and face a bunch of errors.But if I could just add an
@exit
flag right after thediff_from_action
command, I could just forget about all the stuff after.This would solve one thing that made me hesitant about
@chain
earlier. One benefit of the%>%
in dplyr was that it was easy to break out of the chain and return what you wanted.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: