memoise {memoise}R Documentation

Memoise a function

Description

mf <- memoise(f) creates mf, a memoised copy of f. A memoised copy is basically a lazier version of the same function: it saves the answers of new invocations, and re-uses the answers of old ones. Under the right circumstances, this can provide a very nice speedup indeed.

Usage

memoise(
  f,
  ...,
  envir = environment(f),
  cache = cachem::cache_mem(max_size = 1024 * 1024^2),
  omit_args = c(),
  hash = function(x) rlang::hash(x)
)

Arguments

f

Function of which to create a memoised copy.

...

optional variables to use as additional restrictions on caching, specified as one-sided formulas (no LHS). See Examples for usage.

envir

Environment of the returned function.

cache

Cache object. The default is a [cachem::cache_mem()] with a max size of 1024 MB.

omit_args

Names of arguments to ignore when calculating hash.

hash

A function which takes an R object as input and returns a string which is used as a cache key.

Details

There are two main ways to use the memoise function. Say that you wish to memoise glm, which is in the stats package; then you could use
mem_glm <- memoise(glm), or you could use
glm <- memoise(stats::glm).
The first form has the advantage that you still have easy access to both the memoised and the original function. The latter is especially useful to bring the benefits of memoisation to an existing block of R code.

Two example situations where memoise could be of use:

It is recommended that functions in a package are not memoised at build-time, but when the package is loaded. The simplest way to do this is within .onLoad() with, for example

# file.R
fun <- function() {
 some_expensive_process()
}

# zzz.R
.onLoad <- function(libname, pkgname) {
 fun <<- memoise::memoise(fun)
}

See Also

forget, is.memoised, timeout, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memoization, drop_cache

Examples

# a() is evaluated anew each time. memA() is only re-evaluated
# when you call it with a new set of parameters.
a <- function(n) { runif(n) }
memA <- memoise(a)
replicate(5, a(2))
replicate(5, memA(2))

# Caching is done based on parameters' value, so same-name-but-
# changed-value correctly produces two different outcomes...
N <- 4; memA(N)
N <- 5; memA(N)
# ... and same-value-but-different-name correctly produces
#     the same cached outcome.
N <- 4; memA(N)
N2 <- 4; memA(N2)

# memoise() knows about default parameters.
b <- function(n, dummy="a") { runif(n) }
memB <- memoise(b)
memB(2)
memB(2, dummy="a")
# This works, because the interface of the memoised function is the same as
# that of the original function.
formals(b)
formals(memB)
# However, it doesn't know about parameter relevance.
# Different call means different caching, no matter
# that the outcome is the same.
memB(2, dummy="b")

# You can create multiple memoisations of the same function,
# and they'll be independent.
memA(2)
memA2 <- memoise(a)
memA(2)  # Still the same outcome
memA2(2) # Different cache, different outcome

# Multiple memoized functions can share a cache.
cm <- cachem::cache_mem(max_size = 50 * 1024^2)
memA <- memoise(a, cache = cm)
memB <- memoise(b, cache = cm)

# Don't do the same memoisation assignment twice: a brand-new
# memoised function also means a brand-new cache, and *that*
# you could as easily and more legibly achieve using forget().
# (If you're not sure whether you already memoised something,
#  use is.memoised() to check.)
memA(2)
memA <- memoise(a)
memA(2)

# Make a memoized result automatically time out after 10 seconds.
memA3 <- memoise(a, cache = cachem::cache_mem(max_age = 10))
memA3(2)

[Package memoise version 2.0.1 Index]