| Extract {bit} | R Documentation |
Operators acting on bit or bitwhich objects to extract or replace parts.
## S3 method for class 'bit'
x[[i]]
## S3 replacement method for class 'bit'
x[[i]] <- value
## S3 method for class 'bit'
x[i]
## S3 replacement method for class 'bit'
x[i] <- value
## S3 method for class 'bitwhich'
x[[i]]
## S3 replacement method for class 'bitwhich'
x[[i]] <- value
## S3 method for class 'bitwhich'
x[i]
## S3 replacement method for class 'bitwhich'
x[i] <- value
x |
|
i |
preferrably a positive integer subscript or a |
value |
new logical or integer values |
The typical usecase for for '[' and '[<-' is subscripting with positive integers,
negative integers are allowed but slower,
as logical subscripts only scalars are allowed.
The subscript can be given as a bitwhich object.
Also ri can be used as subscript.
Extracting from bit and bitwhich is faster than from logical if positive subscripts are used.
integer subscripts make sense. Negative subscripts are converted to
positive ones, beware the RAM consumption.
The extractors [[ and [ return a logical scalar or
vector. The replacment functions return an object of class(x).
Jens Oehlschlägel
x <- as.bit(c(FALSE, NA, TRUE))
x[] <- c(FALSE, NA, TRUE)
x[1:2]
x[-3]
x[ri(1,2)]
x[as.bitwhich(c(TRUE,TRUE,FALSE))]
x[[1]]
x[] <- TRUE
x[1:2] <- FALSE
x[[1]] <- TRUE