#' Tidy eval helpers
#'
#' @description
#'
#' * \code{\link[rlang]{sym}()} creates a symbol from a string and
#' \code{\link[rlang:sym]{syms}()} creates a list of symbols from a
#' character vector.
#'
#' * \code{\link[rlang:nse-defuse]{enquo}()} and
#' \code{\link[rlang:nse-defuse]{enquos}()} delay the execution of one or
#' several function arguments. \code{enquo()} returns a single quoted
#' expression, which is like a blueprint for the delayed computation.
#' \code{enquos()} returns a list of such quoted expressions.
#'
#' * \code{\link[rlang:nse-defuse]{expr}()} quotes a new expression _locally_. It
#' is mostly useful to build new expressions around arguments
#' captured with [enquo()] or [enquos()]:
#' \code{expr(mean(!!enquo(arg), na.rm = TRUE))}.
#'
#' * \code{\link[rlang]{as_name}()} transforms a quoted variable name
#' into a string. Supplying something else than a quoted variable
#' name is an error.
#'
#' That's unlike \code{\link[rlang]{as_label}()} which also returns
#' a single string but supports any kind of R object as input,
#' including quoted function calls and vectors. Its purpose is to
#' summarise that object into a single label. That label is often
#' suitable as a default name.
#'
#' If you don't know what a quoted expression contains (for instance
#' expressions captured with \code{enquo()} could be a variable
#' name, a call to a function, or an unquoted constant), then use
#' \code{as_label()}. If you know you have quoted a simple variable
#' name, or would like to enforce this, use \code{as_name()}.
#'
#'
#' @md
#' @name tidyeval
#' @keywords internal
#' @importFrom rlang expr enquo enquos sym syms .data := as_name as_label
#' @aliases expr enquo enquos sym syms .data := as_name as_label
#' @export expr enquo enquos sym syms .data := as_name as_label
NULL
#' @import utils
utils::globalVariables("where")
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