#' Sum of vector elements.
#'
#' \code{sum} returns the sum of all the values present in its arguments.
#'
#' This is a generic function: methods can be defined for it directly
#' or via the \code{\link{Summary}} group generic. For this to work properly,
#' the arguments \code{...} should be unnamed, and dispatch is on the
#' first argument.
#'
#' @param ... Numeric, complex, or logical vectors.
#' @param na.rm A logical scalar. Should missing values (including NaN)
#' be removed?
#' @return If all inputs are integer and logical, then the output
#' will be an integer. If integer overflow
#' \url{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integer_overflow} occurs, the output
#' will be NA with a warning. Otherwise it will be a length-one numeric or
#' complex vector.
#'
#' Zero-length vectors have sum 0 by definition. See
#' \url{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empty_sum} for more details.
#' @examples
#' sum(1:10)
#' sum(1:5, 6:10)
#' sum(F, F, F, T, T)
#'
#' sum(.Machine$integer.max, 1L)
#' sum(.Machine$integer.max, 1)
#'
#' \dontrun{
#' sum("a")
#' }
sum <- function(..., na.rm = TRUE) {}
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.