Description Usage Arguments Details Value Methods for as.vector() Note References See Also Examples
vector
produces a vector of the given length and mode.
as.vector
, a generic, attempts to coerce its argument into a
vector of mode mode
(the default is to coerce to whichever
vector mode is most convenient): if the result is atomic all
attributes are removed.
is.vector
returns TRUE
if x
is a vector of the
specified mode having no attributes other than names. It returns
FALSE
otherwise.
1 2 3 |
mode |
character string naming an atomic mode or
|
length |
a non-negative integer specifying the desired length.
For a long vector, i.e., |
x |
an R object. |
The atomic modes are "logical"
, "integer"
,
"numeric"
(synonym "double"
), "complex"
,
"character"
and "raw"
.
If mode = "any"
, is.vector
may return TRUE
for
the atomic modes, list
and expression
.
For any mode
, it will return FALSE
if x
has any
attributes except names. (This is incompatible with S.) On the other
hand, as.vector
removes all attributes including names
for results of atomic mode (but not those of mode "list"
nor
"expression"
).
Note that factors are not vectors; is.vector
returns
FALSE
and as.vector
converts a factor to a character
vector for mode = "any"
.
For vector
, a vector of the given length and mode. Logical
vector elements are initialized to FALSE
, numeric vector
elements to 0
, character vector elements to ""
, raw
vector elements to nul
bytes and list/expression elements to
NULL
.
For as.vector
, a vector (atomic or of type list or expression).
All attributes are removed from the result if it is of an atomic mode,
but not in general for a list result. The default method handles 24
input types and 12 values of type
: the details of most
coercions are undocumented and subject to change.
For is.vector
, TRUE
or FALSE
.
is.vector(x, mode = "numeric")
can be true for vectors of types
"integer"
or "double"
whereas is.vector(x, mode =
"double")
can only be true for those of type "double"
.
as.vector()
Writers of methods for as.vector
need to take care to
follow the conventions of the default method. In particular
Argument mode
can be "any"
, any of the atomic
modes, "list"
, "expression"
, "symbol"
,
"pairlist"
or one of the aliases "double"
and "name"
.
The return value should be of the appropriate mode. For
mode = "any"
this means an atomic vector or list.
Attributes should be treated appropriately: in particular when the result is an atomic vector there should be no attributes, not even names.
is.vector(as.vector(x, m), m)
should be true for any
mode m
, including the default "any"
.
as.vector
and is.vector
are quite distinct from the
meaning of the formal class "vector"
in the methods
package, and hence as(x, "vector")
and
is(x, "vector")
.
Note that as.vector(x)
is not necessarily a null operation if
is.vector(x)
is true: any names will be removed from an atomic
vector.
Non-vector mode
s "symbol"
(synonym "name"
) and
"pairlist"
are accepted but have long been undocumented: they
are used to implement as.name
and
as.pairlist
, and those functions should preferably be
used directly. None of the description here applies to those
mode
s: see the help for the preferred forms.
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
c
, is.numeric
, is.list
, etc.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | df <- data.frame(x = 1:3, y = 5:7)
## Error:
try(as.vector(data.frame(x = 1:3, y = 5:7), mode = "numeric"))
x <- c(a = 1, b = 2)
is.vector(x)
as.vector(x)
all.equal(x, as.vector(x)) ## FALSE
###-- All the following are TRUE:
is.list(df)
! is.vector(df)
! is.vector(df, mode = "list")
is.vector(list(), mode = "list")
|
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