print
Print Values
Description
print
prints its argument and returns it invisibly (via invisible(x)
). It is a generic function which means that new printing methods can be easily added for new class
es.
Usage
print(x, ...) ## S3 method for class 'factor' print(x, quote = FALSE, max.levels = NULL, width = getOption("width"), ...) ## S3 method for class 'table' print(x, digits = getOption("digits"), quote = FALSE, na.print = "", zero.print = "0", right = is.numeric(x) || is.complex(x), justify = "none", ...) ## S3 method for class 'function' print(x, useSource = TRUE, ...)
Arguments
x | an object used to select a method. |
... | further arguments passed to or from other methods. |
quote | logical, indicating whether or not strings should be printed with surrounding quotes. |
max.levels | integer, indicating how many levels should be printed for a factor; if |
width | only used when |
digits | minimal number of significant digits, see |
na.print | character string (or |
zero.print | character specifying how zeros ( |
right | logical, indicating whether or not strings should be right aligned. |
justify | character indicating if strings should left- or right-justified or left alone, passed to |
useSource | logical indicating if internally stored source should be used for printing when present, e.g., if |
Details
The default method, print.default
has its own help page. Use methods("print")
to get all the methods for the print
generic.
print.factor
allows some customization and is used for printing ordered
factors as well.
print.table
for printing table
s allows other customization. As of R 3.0.0, it only prints a description in case of a table with 0-extents (this can happen if a classifier has no valid data).
See noquote
as an example of a class whose main purpose is a specific print
method.
References
Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. (1992) Statistical Models in S. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
See Also
The default method print.default
, and help for the methods above; further options
, noquote
.
For more customizable (but cumbersome) printing, see cat
, format
or also write
. For a simple prototypical print method, see .print.via.format
in package tools.
Examples
require(stats) ts(1:20) #-- print is the "Default function" --> print.ts(.) is called for(i in 1:3) print(1:i) ## Printing of factors attenu$station ## 117 levels -> 'max.levels' depending on width ## ordered factors: levels "l1 < l2 < .." esoph$agegp[1:12] esoph$alcgp[1:12] ## Printing of sparse (contingency) tables set.seed(521) t1 <- round(abs(rt(200, df = 1.8))) t2 <- round(abs(rt(200, df = 1.4))) table(t1, t2) # simple print(table(t1, t2), zero.print = ".") # nicer to read ## same for non-integer "table": T <- table(t2,t1) T <- T * (1+round(rlnorm(length(T)))/4) print(T, zero.print = ".") # quite nicer, print.table(T[,2:8] * 1e9, digits=3, zero.print = ".") ## still slightly inferior to Matrix::Matrix(T) for larger T ## Corner cases with empty extents: table(1, NA) # < table of extent 1 x 0 >
Copyright (©) 1999–2012 R Foundation for Statistical Computing.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License.