unbox | R Documentation |
This function marks an atomic vector or data frame as a
singleton, i.e.
a set with exactly 1 element. Thereby, the value will not turn into an
array
when encoded into JSON. This can only be done for
atomic vectors of length 1, or data frames with exactly 1 row. To automatically
unbox all vectors of length 1 within an object, use the auto_unbox
argument
in toJSON()
.
unbox(x)
x |
atomic vector of length 1, or data frame with 1 row. |
It is usually recommended to avoid this function and stick with the default
encoding schema for the various R classes. The only use case for this function
is if you are bound to some specific predefined JSON structure (e.g. to
submit to an API), which has no natural R representation. Note that the default
encoding for data frames naturally results in a collection of key-value pairs,
without using unbox
.
Returns a singleton version of x
.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singleton_(mathematics)
toJSON(list(foo=123))
toJSON(list(foo=unbox(123)))
# Auto unbox vectors of length one:
x = list(x=1:3, y = 4, z = "foo", k = NULL)
toJSON(x)
toJSON(x, auto_unbox = TRUE)
x <- iris[1,]
toJSON(list(rec=x))
toJSON(list(rec=unbox(x)))
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