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You're reading from  Learning R Programming

Product typeBook
Published inOct 2016
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781785889776
Edition1st Edition
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Kun Ren
Kun Ren
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Kun Ren

Kun Ren has used R for nearly 4 years in quantitative trading, along with C++ and C#, and he has worked very intensively (more than 8-10 hours every day) on useful R packages that the community does not offer yet. He contributes to packages developed by other authors and reports issues to make things work better. He is also a frequent speaker at R conferences in China and has given multiple talks. Kun also has a great social media presence. Additionally, he has substantially contributed to various projects, which is evident from his GitHub account: https://github.com/renkun-ken https://cn.linkedin.com/in/kun-ren-76027530 http://renkun.me/ http://renkun.me/formattable/ http://renkun.me/pipeR/ http://renkun.me/rlist/
Read more about Kun Ren

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Lists


A list is a generic vector that is allowed to include different types of objects, even other lists.

It is useful for its flexibility. For example, the result of a linear model fit in R is basically a list object that contains rich results of a linear regression such as linear coefficients (numeric vectors), residuals (numeric vectors), QR decomposition (a list containing a matrix and other objects), and so on.

It is very handy to extract the information without calling different functions each time because these results are all packed into a list.

Creating a list

We can use list() to create a list, as the function name suggests. Different types of objects can be put into one list. For example, the following code creates a list that contains a single-element numeric vector, a two-entry logical vector, and a character vector of three values:

l0 <- list(1, c(TRUE, FALSE), c("a", "b", "c"))
l0
## [[1]]
## [1] 1
## 
## [[2]]
## [1] TRUE FALSE
## 
## [[3]]
## [1] "a" "b" "c"

We can assign...

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Learning R Programming
Published in: Oct 2016Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781785889776

Author (1)

author image
Kun Ren

Kun Ren has used R for nearly 4 years in quantitative trading, along with C++ and C#, and he has worked very intensively (more than 8-10 hours every day) on useful R packages that the community does not offer yet. He contributes to packages developed by other authors and reports issues to make things work better. He is also a frequent speaker at R conferences in China and has given multiple talks. Kun also has a great social media presence. Additionally, he has substantially contributed to various projects, which is evident from his GitHub account: https://github.com/renkun-ken https://cn.linkedin.com/in/kun-ren-76027530 http://renkun.me/ http://renkun.me/formattable/ http://renkun.me/pipeR/ http://renkun.me/rlist/
Read more about Kun Ren