# this is a comment in Rx <- 3 to assign a value, 3, to a variable, xlength(thing) produces the length of a collectionc(value1, value2, value3) creates a vectorcontainer[i] selects the i'th element from the containerList objects in current environment
ls()
Remove objects in current environment
rm(x)
Remove all objects from current environment
rm(list = ls())
Create a contitional using if, elif, and else
if(x > 0){
print("value is positive")
} else if (x < 0){
print("value is negative")
} else{
print("value is neither positive nor negative")
}
create a for loop to process elements in a collection one at a time
for (i in 1:5) {
print(i)
}
This will print:
1
2
3
4
5
== to test for equality
3 == 3, will return TRUE,'apple' == 'orange' will return FALSEX & Y is True is both X and Y are trueX | Y is True if either X or Y, or both are trueDefining a function:
is_positive <- function(integer_value){
if(interver_value > 0){
TRUE
else{
FALSE
{
}
In R, the last executed line of a function is automatically returned
Specifying a default value for a function argrment
increment_me <- function(value_to_increment, value_to_increment_by = 1){
value_to_increment + value_to_increment_by
}
increment_me(4), will return 5
intrement_me(4, 6), will return 10
Call a function by using function_name(function_arguments)
apply family of functions:
apply()
sapply()
lapply()
mapply()
apply(dat, MARGIN = 2, mean)
will return the average (mean) of each column in dat
install.packages("package-name")update.packages("package-name")library("package-name")