numeric {base} | R Documentation |
Creates or coerces objects of type "numeric"
.
is.numeric
is a more general test of an object being
interpretable as numbers.
numeric(length = 0) as.numeric(x, ...) is.numeric(x)
length |
A non-negative integer specifying the desired length. Double values will be coerced to integer: supplying an argument of length other than one is an error. |
x |
object to be coerced or tested. |
... |
further arguments passed to or from other methods. |
numeric
is identical to double
(and real
).
It creates a double-precision vector of the specified length with each
element equal to 0
.
as.numeric
is a generic function, but S3 methods must be
written for as.double
. It is identical to
as.double
(and as.real
).
is.numeric
is an internal generic primitive
function: you can write methods to handle specific classes of objects,
see InternalMethods. It is not the same as
is.double
. Factors are handled by the default method,
and there are methods for classes "Date"
,
"POSIXt"
and "difftime"
(all of which
return false). Methods for is.numeric
should only return true
if the base type of the class is double
or integer
and values can reasonably be regarded as numeric
(e.g. arithmetic on them makes sense, and comparison should be done
via the base type).
for numeric
and as.numeric
see double
.
The default method for is.numeric
returns TRUE
if its argument is of mode "numeric"
(type "double"
or type "integer"
) and not a
factor, and FALSE
otherwise. That is,
is.integer(x) || is.double(x)
, or
(mode(x) == "numeric") && !is.factor(x)
.
as.numeric
and is.numeric
are internally S4 generic and
so methods can be set for them via setMethod
.
To ensure that as.numeric
, as.double
and as.real
remain identical, S4 methods can only be set for as.numeric
.
It is a historical anomaly that R has three names for its
floating-point vectors, double
, numeric
and real
.
double
is the name of the type.
numeric
is the name of the mode and also of the implicit
class. As an S4 formal class, use "numeric"
.
real
is deprecated and should not be used in new code.
The potential confusion is that R has used mode
"numeric"
to mean ‘double or integer’, which conflicts
with the S4 usage. Thus is.numeric
tests the mode, not the
class, but as.numeric
(which is identical to as.double
)
coerces to the class.
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
double
, integer
, storage.mode
.
as.numeric(c("-.1"," 2.7 ","B")) # (-0.1, 2.7, NA) + warning as.numeric(factor(5:10))