How to write trycatch in R

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灰色年华
灰色年华 2020-11-21 23:03

I want to write trycatch code to deal with error in downloading from the web.

url <- c(
    \"http://stat.ethz.ch/R-manual/R-devel/library/ba         


        
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  • 2020-11-21 23:19

    R uses functions for implementing try-catch block:

    The syntax somewhat looks like this:

    result = tryCatch({
        expr
    }, warning = function(warning_condition) {
        warning-handler-code
    }, error = function(error_condition) {
        error-handler-code
    }, finally={
        cleanup-code
    })
    

    In tryCatch() there are two ‘conditions’ that can be handled: ‘warnings’ and ‘errors’. The important thing to understand when writing each block of code is the state of execution and the scope. @source

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  • 2020-11-21 23:21

    tryCatch has a slightly complex syntax structure. However, once we understand the 4 parts which constitute a complete tryCatch call as shown below, it becomes easy to remember:

    expr: [Required] R code(s) to be evaluated

    error : [Optional] What should run if an error occured while evaluating the codes in expr

    warning : [Optional] What should run if a warning occured while evaluating the codes in expr

    finally : [Optional] What should run just before quitting the tryCatch call, irrespective of if expr ran successfully, with an error, or with a warning

    tryCatch(
        expr = {
            # Your code...
            # goes here...
            # ...
        },
        error = function(e){ 
            # (Optional)
            # Do this if an error is caught...
        },
        warning = function(w){
            # (Optional)
            # Do this if an warning is caught...
        },
        finally = {
            # (Optional)
            # Do this at the end before quitting the tryCatch structure...
        }
    )
    

    Thus, a toy example, to calculate the log of a value might look like:

    log_calculator <- function(x){
        tryCatch(
            expr = {
                message(log(x))
                message("Successfully executed the log(x) call.")
            },
            error = function(e){
                message('Caught an error!')
                print(e)
            },
            warning = function(w){
                message('Caught an warning!')
                print(w)
            },
            finally = {
                message('All done, quitting.')
            }
        )    
    }
    

    Now, running three cases:

    A valid case

    log_calculator(10)
    # 2.30258509299405
    # Successfully executed the log(x) call.
    # All done, quitting.
    

    A "warning" case

    log_calculator(-10)
    # Caught an warning!
    # <simpleWarning in log(x): NaNs produced>
    # All done, quitting.
    

    An "error" case

    log_calculator("log_me")
    # Caught an error!
    # <simpleError in log(x): non-numeric argument to mathematical function>
    # All done, quitting.
    

    I've written about some useful use-cases which I use regularly. Find more details here: https://rsangole.netlify.com/post/try-catch/

    Hope this is helpful.

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  • 2020-11-21 23:23

    Since I just lost two days of my life trying to solve for tryCatch for an irr function, I thought I should share my wisdom (and what is missing). FYI - irr is an actual function from FinCal in this case where got errors in a few cases on a large data set.

    1. Set up tryCatch as part of a function. For example:

      irr2 <- function (x) {
        out <- tryCatch(irr(x), error = function(e) NULL)
        return(out)
      }
      
    2. For the error (or warning) to work, you actually need to create a function. I originally for error part just wrote error = return(NULL) and ALL values came back null.

    3. Remember to create a sub-output (like my "out") and to return(out).

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  • 2020-11-21 23:27

    Here goes a straightforward example:

    # Do something, or tell me why it failed
    my_update_function <- function(x){
        tryCatch(
            # This is what I want to do...
            {
            y = x * 2
            return(y)
            },
            # ... but if an error occurs, tell me what happened: 
            error=function(error_message) {
                message("This is my custom message.")
                message("And below is the error message from R:")
                message(error_message)
                return(NA)
            }
        )
    }
    

    If you also want to capture a "warning", just add warning= similar to the error= part.

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  • 2020-11-21 23:32

    Well then: welcome to the R world ;-)

    Here you go

    Setting up the code

    urls <- c(
        "http://stat.ethz.ch/R-manual/R-devel/library/base/html/connections.html",
        "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xz",
        "xxxxx"
    )
    readUrl <- function(url) {
        out <- tryCatch(
            {
                # Just to highlight: if you want to use more than one 
                # R expression in the "try" part then you'll have to 
                # use curly brackets.
                # 'tryCatch()' will return the last evaluated expression 
                # in case the "try" part was completed successfully
    
                message("This is the 'try' part")
    
                readLines(con=url, warn=FALSE) 
                # The return value of `readLines()` is the actual value 
                # that will be returned in case there is no condition 
                # (e.g. warning or error). 
                # You don't need to state the return value via `return()` as code 
                # in the "try" part is not wrapped insided a function (unlike that
                # for the condition handlers for warnings and error below)
            },
            error=function(cond) {
                message(paste("URL does not seem to exist:", url))
                message("Here's the original error message:")
                message(cond)
                # Choose a return value in case of error
                return(NA)
            },
            warning=function(cond) {
                message(paste("URL caused a warning:", url))
                message("Here's the original warning message:")
                message(cond)
                # Choose a return value in case of warning
                return(NULL)
            },
            finally={
            # NOTE:
            # Here goes everything that should be executed at the end,
            # regardless of success or error.
            # If you want more than one expression to be executed, then you 
            # need to wrap them in curly brackets ({...}); otherwise you could
            # just have written 'finally=<expression>' 
                message(paste("Processed URL:", url))
                message("Some other message at the end")
            }
        )    
        return(out)
    }
    

    Applying the code

    > y <- lapply(urls, readUrl)
    Processed URL: http://stat.ethz.ch/R-manual/R-devel/library/base/html/connections.html
    Some other message at the end
    Processed URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xz
    Some other message at the end
    URL does not seem to exist: xxxxx
    Here's the original error message:
    cannot open the connection
    Processed URL: xxxxx
    Some other message at the end
    Warning message:
    In file(con, "r") : cannot open file 'xxxxx': No such file or directory
    

    Investigating the output

    > head(y[[1]])
    [1] "<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC \"-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN\">"      
    [2] "<html><head><title>R: Functions to Manipulate Connections</title>"      
    [3] "<meta http-equiv=\"Content-Type\" content=\"text/html; charset=utf-8\">"
    [4] "<link rel=\"stylesheet\" type=\"text/css\" href=\"R.css\">"             
    [5] "</head><body>"                                                          
    [6] ""    
    
    > length(y)
    [1] 3
    
    > y[[3]]
    [1] NA
    

    Additional remarks

    tryCatch

    tryCatch returns the value associated to executing expr unless there's an error or a warning. In this case, specific return values (see return(NA) above) can be specified by supplying a respective handler function (see arguments error and warning in ?tryCatch). These can be functions that already exist, but you can also define them within tryCatch() (as I did above).

    The implications of choosing specific return values of the handler functions

    As we've specified that NA should be returned in case of error, the third element in y is NA. If we'd have chosen NULL to be the return value, the length of y would just have been 2 instead of 3 as lapply() will simply "ignore" return values that are NULL. Also note that if you don't specify an explicit return value via return(), the handler functions will return NULL (i.e. in case of an error or a warning condition).

    "Undesired" warning message

    As warn=FALSE doesn't seem to have any effect, an alternative way to suppress the warning (which in this case isn't really of interest) is to use

    suppressWarnings(readLines(con=url))
    

    instead of

    readLines(con=url, warn=FALSE)
    

    Multiple expressions

    Note that you can also place multiple expressions in the "actual expressions part" (argument expr of tryCatch()) if you wrap them in curly brackets (just like I illustrated in the finally part).

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