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#' @export
OraclePolicy <- R6::R6Class(
portable = FALSE,
class = FALSE,
inherit = Policy,
public = list(
is_oracle = TRUE,
class_name = "OraclePolicy",
initialize = function() {
super$initialize()
},
set_parameters = function(context_params) {
},
get_action = function(t, context) {
# when self$is_oracle == TRUE, agent will later
# override action$choice and set it to optimal arm
action$choice = 1
action
},
set_reward = function(t, context, action, reward) {
self$theta$optimal_reward <- reward$optimal_reward
self$theta$optimal_arm <- reward$optimal_arm
self$theta
}
)
)
#' Policy: Oracle
#'
#' \code{OraclePolicy} is a also known as a "cheating" or "godlike"
#' policy, as it knows the reward probabilities at all times,
#' and will always play the optimal arm. It is often used as
#' a baseline to compare other policies to.
#'
#' @name OraclePolicy
#'
#'
#' @section Usage:
#' \preformatted{
#' policy <- OraclePolicy()
#' }
#'
#' @section Arguments:
#'
#' \describe{
#' \item{\code{name}}{
#' character string specifying this policy. \code{name}
#' is, among others, saved to the History log and displayed in summaries and plots.
#' }
#' }
#'
#' @section Methods:
#'
#' \describe{
#' \item{\code{new()}}{ Generates a new \code{OraclePolicy} object. Arguments are defined in the Argument
#' section above.}
#' }
#'
#' \describe{
#' \item{\code{set_parameters()}}{each policy needs to assign the parameters it wants to keep track of
#' to list \code{self$theta_to_arms} that has to be defined in \code{set_parameters()}'s body.
#' The parameters defined here can later be accessed by arm index in the following way:
#' \code{theta[[index_of_arm]]$parameter_name}
#' }
#' }
#'
#' \describe{
#' \item{\code{get_action(context)}}{
#' here, a policy decides which arm to choose, based on the current values
#' of its parameters and, potentially, the current context.
#' }
#' }
#'
#' \describe{
#' \item{\code{set_reward(reward, context)}}{
#' in \code{set_reward(reward, context)}, a policy updates its parameter values
#' based on the reward received, and, potentially, the current context.
#' }
#' }
#'
#' @references
#'
#' Gittins, J., Glazebrook, K., & Weber, R. (2011). Multi-armed bandit allocation indices. John Wiley & Sons.
#' (Original work published 1989)
#'
#' @seealso
#'
#' Core contextual classes: \code{\link{Bandit}}, \code{\link{Policy}}, \code{\link{Simulator}},
#' \code{\link{Agent}}, \code{\link{History}}, \code{\link{Plot}}
#'
#' Bandit subclass examples: \code{\link{BasicBernoulliBandit}}, \code{\link{ContextualLogitBandit}},
#' \code{\link{OfflineReplayEvaluatorBandit}}
#'
#' Policy subclass examples: \code{\link{EpsilonGreedyPolicy}}, \code{\link{ContextualLinTSPolicy}}
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