stringfish is a framework for performing string and sequence operations using the alt-rep system to speed up the comptuation of common string operations.
The ultimate goal of the package is to unify alt-rep string implementations under a common framework.
The alt-rep system (new as of R 3.5.0) allows package developers to represent R objects using their own custom memory layout, completely invisible to the user. stringfish represents string data as a simple C++/STL vector, which is very fast andlightweight.
Using normal R functions to process string data (e.g. substr, gsub, paste, etc.) causes “materialization” of alt-rep vectors to normal R data, which can be a slow process. Therefore, in order to take full advantage of the alt-rep framework, string processing functions need to be re-written to be alt-rep aware. This package hopes to fulfill that purpose.
Below is an example that imitates common bioinformatic processing. First, we read in a bunch of sequencing data (in this case, 1 million randomly generated amino acid sequences) and then uses sf_substr to chop off two amino acids at the beginning and end of each sequence. The last operation then uses sf_grepl to count the number of “RS” motifs, a common T-cell Receptor Influenza binding motif.
library(stringfish)
x <- sf_random_strings(1e6, string_size = 20, charset = "ARNDCQEGHILKMFPSTWYV")
x1 <- sf_substr(x, 3, -3)
s1 <- sum(sf_grepl(x, "RS", encode_mode = "byte"))Doing the same thing in base R for comparison:
A quick benchmark comparing the above example done with stringfish or base R.
A list of implemented stringfish function and analogous base R function:
sf_iconv (iconv)sf_nchar (nchar)sf_substr (substr)sf_paste (paste0)sf_collapse (paste0)sf_readLines (readLines)sf_grepl (grepl)sf_gsub (gsub)Utility functions:
convert_to_sf – converts a character vector to a stringfish vectorget_string_type – determines string type (whether alt-rep or normal)materialize – converts any alt-rep object into a normal R objectnew_sf_vec – creates a new and empty stringfish vectorsf_random_strings – creates a random strings as either a stringfish or normal R vectorstringfish functions are not intended to exactly replicate their base R analogues. One systematic difference is stringfish does minimal encoding checks and no re-encoding. Therefore, to combine latin1 and UTF-8 encoded strings, first use sf_iconv. Another difference is that subject parameters are always the first argument, to be easier to use in pipes (%>%). E.g., gsub(pattern, replacement, subject) becomes gsub(subject ,pattern, replacement).
stringfish as a framework is intended to be easily extensible. Stringfish vectors can be worked into Rcpp scripts or even into other packages (see the qs package for an example).
Below is a detailed Rcpp script example that creates a function to altnerate upper and lower case of strings.
// [[Rcpp::plugins(cpp11)]]
// [[Rcpp::depends(stringfish)]]
#include <Rcpp.h>
#include "sf_external.h"
using namespace Rcpp;
// [[Rcpp::export]]
SEXP sf_alternate_case(SEXP x) {
// Iterate through a character vector using the RStringIndexer class
// If the input vector x is a stringfish character vector it will do so without materialization
RStringIndexer r(x);
size_t len = r.size();
// Create an output stringfish vector
// Like all R objects, it must be protected from garbage collection
SEXP output = PROTECT(sf_vector(len));
// Obtain a reference to the underlying output data
sf_vec_data & output_data = sf_vec_data_ref(output);
// You can use range based for loop via an iterator class that returns RStringIndexer::rstring_info e
// rstring info is a struct containing const char * ptr (null terminated), int len, and cetype_t enc
// a NA string is represented by a nullptr
// Alternatively, access the data via the function r.getCharLenCE(i)
size_t i = 0;
for(auto e : r) {
// check if string is NA and go to next if it is
if(e.ptr == nullptr) {
i++; // increment output index
continue;
}
// create a temporary output string and process the results
std::string temp(e.len, '\0');
bool case_switch = false;
for(int j=0; j<e.len; j++) {
if((e.ptr[j] >= 65) & (e.ptr[j] <= 90)) { // char j is upper case
if((case_switch = !case_switch)) { // check if we should convert to lower case
temp[j] = e.ptr[j] + 32;
continue;
}
} else if((e.ptr[j] >= 97) & (e.ptr[j] <= 122)) { // char j is lower case
if(!(case_switch = !case_switch)) { // check if we should convert to upper case
temp[j] = e.ptr[j] - 32;
continue;
}
} else if(e.ptr[j] == 32) {
case_switch = false;
}
temp[j] = e.ptr[j];
}
// Create a new vector element sfstring and insert the processed string into the stringfish vector
// sfstring has three constructors, 1) taking a std::string and encoding,
// 2) a char pointer and encoding, or 3) a CHARSXP object (e.g. sfstring(NA_STRING))
output_data[i] = sfstring(temp, e.enc);
i++; // increment output index
}
// Finally, call unprotect and return result
UNPROTECT(1);
return output;
}Example function call: