c Combine Values into a Vector or List
Description
This is a generic function which combines its arguments.
The default method combines its arguments to form a vector. All arguments are coerced to a common type which is the type of the returned value, and all attributes except names are removed.
Usage
## S3 Generic function c(...) ## Default S3 method: c(..., recursive = FALSE, use.names = TRUE)
Arguments
... | objects to be concatenated. All |
recursive | logical. If |
use.names | logical indicating if |
Details
The output type is determined from the highest type of the components in the hierarchy NULL < raw < logical < integer < double < complex < character < list < expression. Pairlists are treated as lists, whereas non-vector components (such as names / symbols and calls) are treated as one-element lists which cannot be unlisted even if recursive = TRUE.
Note that in R < 4.1.0, factors were treated only via their internal integer codes: now there is c.factor method which combines factors into a factor.
c is sometimes used for its side effect of removing attributes except names, for example to turn an array into a vector. as.vector is a more intuitive way to do this, but also drops names. Note that methods other than the default are not required to do this (and they will almost certainly preserve a class attribute).
This is a primitive function.
Value
NULL or an expression or a vector of an appropriate mode. (With no arguments the value is NULL.)
S4 methods
This function is S4 generic, but with argument list (x, ...).
References
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
See Also
unlist and as.vector to produce attribute-free vectors.
Examples
c(1,7:9) c(1:5, 10.5, "next") ## uses with a single argument to drop attributes x <- 1:4 names(x) <- letters[1:4] x c(x) # has names as.vector(x) # no names dim(x) <- c(2,2) x c(x) as.vector(x) ## append to a list: ll <- list(A = 1, c = "C") ## do *not* use c(ll, d = 1:3) # which is == c(ll, as.list(c(d = 1:3))) ## but rather c(ll, d = list(1:3)) # c() combining two lists c(list(A = c(B = 1)), recursive = TRUE) c(options(), recursive = TRUE) c(list(A = c(B = 1, C = 2), B = c(E = 7)), recursive = TRUE)
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Licensed under the GNU General Public License.