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# this is a comment in R
- Use
x <- 3
to assign a value,3
, to a variable,x
- R counts from 1, unlike many other programming languages (e.g., Python)
length(thing)
returns the number of elements contained in the variablecollection
c(value1, value2, value3)
creates a vectorcontainer[i]
selects the i'th element from the variablecontainer
List objects in current environment
ls()
Remove objects in current environment
rm(x)
Remove all objects from current environment
rm(list = ls())
- Create a conditional using
if
,else if
, andelse
if(x > 0){
print("value is positive")
} else if (x < 0){
print("value is negative")
} else{
print("value is neither positive nor negative")
}
{: .r}
- create a
for
loop to process elements in a collection one at a time
for (i in 1:5) {
print(i)
}
{: .r}
This will print:
1
2
3
4
5
{: .output}
- Use
==
to test for equality3 == 3
, will returnTRUE
,'apple' == 'orange'
will returnFALSE
X & Y
isTRUE
is both X and Y are trueX | Y
isTRUE
if either X or Y, or both are true
- Defining a function:
is_positive <- function(integer_value){
if(integer_value > 0){
TRUE
}
else{
FALSE
{
}
{: .r}
In R, the last executed line of a function is automatically returned
- Specifying a default value for a function argument
increment_me <- function(value_to_increment, value_to_increment_by = 1){
value_to_increment + value_to_increment_by
}
{: .r}
increment_me(4)
, will return 5
increment_me(4, 6)
, will return 10
-
Call a function by using
function_name(function_arguments)
-
apply family of functions:
apply()
,sapply()
,lapply()
, andmapply()
apply(dat, MARGIN = 2, mean)
will return the average (mean
) of each column in dat
- Install package by using
install.packages("package-name")
- Update packages by using
update.packages("package-name")
- Load packages by using
library("package-name")
{:auto_ids} argument : A value given to a function or program when it runs. The term is often used interchangeably (and inconsistently) with parameter.
call stack : A data structure inside a running program that keeps track of active function calls. Each call's variables are stored in a stack frame; a new stack frame is put on top of the stack for each call, and discarded when the call is finished.
comma-separated values (CSV) : A common textual representation for tables in which the values in each row are separated by commas.
comment
: A remark in a program that is intended to help human readers understand what is going on, but is ignored by the computer. Comments in Python, R, and the Unix shell start with a #
character and run to the end of the line; comments in SQL start with --
, and other languages have other conventions.
conditional statement : A statement in a program that might or might not be executed depending on whether a test is true or false.
dimensions (of an array)
: An array's extent, represented as a vector. For example, an array with 5 rows and 3 columns has dimensions (5,3)
.
documentation : Human-language text written to explain what software does, how it works, or how to use it.
encapsulation : The practice of hiding something's implementation details so that the rest of a program can worry about what it does rather than how it does it.
for loop : A loop that is executed once for each value in some kind of set, list, or range. See also: while loop.
function body : The statements that are executed inside a function.
function call : A use of a function in another piece of software.
function composition
: The immediate application of one function to the result of another, such as f(g(x))
.
index : A subscript that specifies the location of a single value in a collection, such as a single pixel in an image.
loop variable : The variable that keeps track of the progress of the loop.
notional machine : An abstraction of a computer used to think about what it can and will do.
parameter : A variable named in the function's declaration that is used to hold a value passed into the call. The term is often used interchangeably (and inconsistently) with argument.
pipe : A connection from the output of one program to the input of another. When two or more programs are connected in this way, they are called a "pipeline".
return statement : A statement that causes a function to stop executing and return a value to its caller immediately.
silent failure : Failing without producing any warning messages. Silent failures are hard to detect and debug.
slice : A regular subsequence of a larger sequence, such as the first five elements or every second element.
stack frame : A data structure that provides storage for a function's local variables. Each time a function is called, a new stack frame is created and put on the top of the call stack. When the function returns, the stack frame is discarded.
standard input (stdin) : A process's default input stream. In interactive command-line applications, it is typically connected to the keyboard; in a pipe, it receives data from the standard output of the preceding process.
standard output (stdout) : A process's default output stream. In interactive command-line applications, data sent to standard output is displayed on the screen; in a pipe, it is passed to the standard input of the next process.
string : Short for "character string", a sequence of zero or more characters.
while loop : A loop that keeps executing as long as some condition is true. See also: for loop.