Several questions about the two R-language tags: nse and non-standard-evaluation, which are synonymous.
- Which of the two should be defined as an alias of which? [nse]-> [non-standard-evaluation] or [non-standard-evaluation] -> [nse] ?
- Recommendation: 'non-standard-evaluation' should be the main topic name, 'nse' should be the alias to it. Hence, [nse] -> [non-standard-evaluation].
- Reasoning: a) few beginner users know the acronym 'nse', and outside R it's unheard-of, so likely to result in acronym collision. In fact, collides with 'Nmap Scripting Engine' (Linux cross-platform command-line network security scanner and exploration tool), which should be using its own tag nmap
- b) no new R users will relate 'nse' to "Why did my dplyr/data.table/ggplot/etc. function call not work?"
- There is also a tag standard-evaluation, which is the antonym. I'm not making a recommendation about what to do with it (merge/leave separate). Your thoughts?
- Last, non-standard-evaluation needs a (draft) topic definition.
- What packages does this concept occur in:
dplyr, magrittr, tidyverse, data.table, ggplot, seplyr, lazyeval
, what else? Do we just say "in some R packages...?" - Please reply with suggested draft topic definition. I couldn't come up with one, it's quite tricky to write one both succinct and general, and also accessible to new-users. I looked at a few articles 1, 2, 3 etc. and they aren't either succinct or accessible to new users.
- What packages does this concept occur in:
f(a,b,c)
, a,b,c are literal variable/column names. Whereas with NSE,f(...)
can contain arbitrary other code which gets evaluated later; we could reference variables or columns that don't yet exist, or call functions which aren't yet defined, etc." How's that? Probably best not to mention promise, scope in the first paragraph, the one users will see on mouseover. You can mention the more complex concepts in later paragraphs, or by reference using URL.nse
has already been established above).