327
votes

I'd like to check if some variable is defined in R - without getting an error. How can I do this?

My attempts (not successful):

> is.na(ooxx)
Error: object 'ooxx' not found
> is.finite(ooxx)
Error: object 'ooxx' not found

Thanks!

7

7 Answers

493
votes

You want exists():

R> exists("somethingUnknown")
[1] FALSE
R> somethingUnknown <- 42
R> exists("somethingUnknown")
[1] TRUE
R> 
122
votes

See ?exists, for some definition of "...is defined". E.g.

> exists("foo")
[1] FALSE
> foo <- 1:10
> exists("foo")
[1] TRUE
67
votes

if you are inside a function, missing() is what you want.

exchequer = function(x) {
    if(missing(x)){
        message("x is missing… :-(")
    }
}

exchequer()
x is missing… :-(
54
votes

As others have pointed out, you're looking for exists. Keep in mind that using exists with names used by R's base packages would return true regardless of whether you defined the variable:

> exists("data")
[1] TRUE

To get around this (as pointed out by Bazz; see ?exists), use the inherits argument:

> exists("data", inherits = FALSE)
[1] FALSE

foo <- TRUE
> exists("foo", inherits = FALSE)
[1] TRUE

Of course, if you wanted to search the name spaces of attached packages, this would also fall short:

> exists("data.table")
[1] FALSE
require(data.table)
> exists("data.table", inherits = FALSE)
[1] FALSE
> exists("data.table")
[1] TRUE

The only thing I can think of to get around this -- to search in attached packages but not in base packages -- is the following:

any(sapply(1:(which(search() == "tools:rstudio") - 1L),
           function(pp) exists(_object_name_, where = pp, inherits = FALSE)))

Compare replacing _object_name_ with "data.table" (TRUE) vs. "var" (FALSE)

(of course, if you're not on RStudio, I think the first automatically attached environment is "package:stats")

32
votes

If you don't want to use quotes, you can use deparse(substitute()) trick which I found in the example section of ?substitute:

is.defined <- function(sym) {
  sym <- deparse(substitute(sym))
  env <- parent.frame()
  exists(sym, env)
}

is.defined(a)
# FALSE
a <- 10
is.defined(a)
# TRUE
1
votes

There may be situations in which you do not exactly know the name of the variable you are looking for, like when an array of results have been created by a queuing system. These can possibly be addressed with "ls" and its argument "pattern" that expects a regular expression.

The "exists" function could be reimplemented that way as

exists <-function(variablename) {
   #print(ls(env=globalenv()))
   return(1==length(ls(pattern=paste("^",variablename,"$",sep=""),env=globalenv())))
}

While preparing this answer, I was a bit surprised about the need for the need of the specification of the environment when invoking ls() from within a function. So, thank you for that, stackoverflow! There is also an "all.names" attribute that I should have set to true but have omitted.

0
votes

If you don't mind using quotes, you can use:

exists("x")

If you don't want to use quotes you can use:

exists(deparse(substitute(x)))