cat
Concatenate and Print
Description
Outputs the objects, concatenating the representations. cat
performs much less conversion than print
.
Usage
cat(... , file = "", sep = " ", fill = FALSE, labels = NULL, append = FALSE)
Arguments
... | R objects (see ‘Details’ for the types of objects allowed). |
file | A connection, or a character string naming the file to print to. If |
sep | a character vector of strings to append after each element. |
fill | a logical or (positive) numeric controlling how the output is broken into successive lines. If |
labels | character vector of labels for the lines printed. Ignored if |
append | logical. Only used if the argument |
Details
cat
is useful for producing output in user-defined functions. It converts its arguments to character vectors, concatenates them to a single character vector, appends the given sep =
string(s) to each element and then outputs them.
No linefeeds are output unless explicitly requested by "\n" or if generated by filling (if argument fill
is TRUE
or numeric).
If file
is a connection and open for writing it is written from its current position. If it is not open, it is opened for the duration of the call in "wt"
mode and then closed again.
Currently only atomic vectors and names are handled, together with NULL
and other zero-length objects (which produce no output). Character strings are output ‘as is’ (unlike print.default
which escapes non-printable characters and backslash — use encodeString
if you want to output encoded strings using cat
). Other types of R object should be converted (e.g., by as.character
or format
) before being passed to cat
. That includes factors, which are output as integer vectors.
cat
converts numeric/complex elements in the same way as print
(and not in the same way as as.character
which is used by the S equivalent), so options
"digits"
and "scipen"
are relevant. However, it uses the minimum field width necessary for each element, rather than the same field width for all elements.
Value
None (invisible NULL
).
Note
If any element of sep
contains a newline character, it is treated as a vector of terminators rather than separators, an element being output after every vector element and a newline after the last. Entries are recycled as needed.
References
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
See Also
print
, format
, and paste
which concatenates into a string.
Examples
iter <- stats::rpois(1, lambda = 10) ## print an informative message cat("iteration = ", iter <- iter + 1, "\n") ## 'fill' and label lines: cat(paste(letters, 100* 1:26), fill = TRUE, labels = paste0("{", 1:10, "}:"))
Copyright (©) 1999–2012 R Foundation for Statistical Computing.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License.