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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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Assignment expressions


Assignment may be one of the most fundamental expressions in all programming languages. What it does is assign or bind a value to a symbol so that we can refer to the value by that symbol later.

Despite the similarity, R adopts the <- operator to perform assignment. This is a bit different from many other languages using = although this is also allowed in R:

x <- 1 
y <- c(1, 2, 3) 
z <- list(x, y) 

We don't have to declare the symbol and its type before assigning a value to it. If a symbol does not exist in the environment, the assignment will create that symbol. If a symbol already exists, the assignment will not end up in conflict, but will rebind the new value to that symbol.

Alternative assignment operators

There are some alternate yet equivalent operators we can use. Compared to x <- f(z), which binds the value of f(z) to symbol x, we can also use -> to perform assignment in the opposite direction:

2 -> x1 

We can even chain...

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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