expression {base} | R Documentation |
Creates or tests for objects of mode "expression"
.
expression(...) is.expression(x) as.expression(x, ...)
... |
|
x |
an arbitrary R object. |
‘Expression’ here is not being used in its colloquial sense,
that of mathematical expressions. Those are calls (see
call
) in R, and an R expression vector is a list of
calls, symbols etc, for example as returned by parse
.
As an object of mode "expression"
is a list, it can be
subsetted by [
, [[
or $
, the latter two extracting
individual calls etc. The replacement forms of these operators can be
used to replace or delete elements.
expression
and is.expression
are primitive functions.
expression
is ‘special’: it does not evaluate its arguments.
expression
returns a vector of type "expression"
containing its arguments (unevaluated).
is.expression
returns TRUE
if expr
is an
expression object and FALSE
otherwise.
as.expression
attempts to coerce its argument into an
expression object. It is generic, and only the default method is
described here. (The default method calls
as.vector(type="expression")
and so may dispatch methods for
as.vector
.) NULL
, calls, symbols (see
as.symbol
) and pairlists are returned as the element of
a length-one expression vector. Atomic vectors are placed
element-by-element into an expression vector (without using any
names): lists are changed type to an expression vector (keeping all
attributes). Other types are not currently supported.
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
call
,
eval
,
function
.
Further,
text
and
legend
for plotting mathematical expressions.
length(ex1 <- expression(1+ 0:9))# 1 ex1 eval(ex1)# 1:10 length(ex3 <- expression(u,v, 1+ 0:9))# 3 mode(ex3 [3]) # expression mode(ex3[[3]])# call rm(ex3)