names {base} | R Documentation |
Functions to get or set the names of an object.
names(x) names(x) <- value
x |
an R object. |
value |
a character vector of up to the same length as |
names
is a generic accessor function, and names<-
is a
generic replacement function. The default methods get and set
the "names"
attribute of a vector (including a list) or
pairlist.
If value
is shorter than x
, it is extended by character
NA
s to the length of x
.
It is possible to update just part of the names attribute via the
general rules: see the examples. This works because the expression
there is evaluated as z <- "names<-"(z, "[<-"(names(z), 3, "c2"))
.
The name ""
is special: it is used to indicate that there is no
name associated with an element of a (atomic or generic) vector.
Subscripting by ""
will match nothing (not even elements which
have no name).
A name can be character NA
, but such a name will never be
matched and is likely to lead to confusion.
Both are primitive functions.
For names
, NULL
or a character vector of the same length
as x
. (NULL
is given if the object has no names,
including for objects of types which cannot have names.)
For names<-
, the updated object. (Note that the value of
names(x) <- value
is that of the assignment, value
, not
the return value from the left-hand side.)
For vectors, the names are one of the attributes with restrictions on the possible values. For pairlists, the names are the tags and converted to and from a character vector.
For a one-dimensional array the names
attribute really is
dimnames[[1]]
.
Formally classed aka “S4” objects typically have
slotNames()
(and no names()
).
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
# print the names attribute of the islands data set names(islands) # remove the names attribute names(islands) <- NULL islands rm(islands) # remove the copy made z <- list(a=1, b="c", c=1:3) names(z) # change just the name of the third element. names(z)[3] <- "c2" z z <- 1:3 names(z) ## assign just one name names(z)[2] <- "b" z