0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views7 pages

R Variable

R has several basic data types including numeric, integer, logical, complex, and character. Each data type stores values differently and has specific operations that can be performed on it. The data type of a variable determines what values it can hold and what math or logical operations can be done on that variable. Users can check or change the data type of variables using functions like class(), typeof(), is.type(), and as.type().

Uploaded by

Nitish Ravuvari
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
Download as doc, pdf, or txt
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views7 pages

R Variable

R has several basic data types including numeric, integer, logical, complex, and character. Each data type stores values differently and has specific operations that can be performed on it. The data type of a variable determines what values it can hold and what math or logical operations can be done on that variable. Users can check or change the data type of variables using functions like class(), typeof(), is.type(), and as.type().

Uploaded by

Nitish Ravuvari
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
Download as doc, pdf, or txt
Download as doc, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1/ 7

R – Data Types


Each variable in R has an associated data type. Each data type requires different amounts
of memory and has some specific operations which can be performed over it.
R has the following basic data types and the following table shows the data type and the
values that each data type can take.

Basic Data Types Values

Numeric Set of all real numbers

Integer Set of all integers, Z

Logical TRUE and FALSE

Complex Set of complex numbers

Character “a”, “b”, “c”, …, “@”, “#”, “$”, …., “1”, “2”, …etc
Numeric Datatype
Decimal values are called numerics in R. It is the default data type for numbers in R. If you assign a
decimal value to a variable x as follows, x will be of numeric type.
# A simple R program
# to illustrate Numeric data type
  Y
# Assign a decimal value to x
x = 5.6 
  
# print the class name of variable
print(class(x)) 
  
# print the type of variable
print(typeof(x))

Output:
[1] "numeric"
[1] "double"
Even if an integer is assigned to a variable y, it is still being saved as a nume ric value.
# A simple R program
# to illustrate Numeric data type
  
# Assign an integer value to y
y = 5 
  
# print the class name of variable
print(class(y)) 
  
# print the type of variable
print(typeof(y)) 

Output:

[1] "numeric"
[1] "double"
When R stores a number in a variable, it converts the number into a “double” value or a
decimal type with at least two decimal places. This means that a value such as “5” here,
is stored as 5.00 with a type of double and a class of numeric.
And also y is not an integer here can be confirmed with the is.integer() function.
# A simple R program
# to illustrate Numeric data type
  
# Assign a integer value to y
y = 5 
  
# is y an integer?
print(is.integer(x))  

Output:
[1] FALSE
Integer Datatype
R supports integer data types which are the set of all integers. You can create as well as
convert a value into an integer type using the as.integer() function. You can also use the
capital ‘L’ notation as a suffix to denote that a particular value is of the integer data type.
# A simple R program
# to illustrate integer data type
  
# Create an integer value
x = as.integer(5) 
  
# print the class name of x
print(class(x)) 
  
# print the type of x
print(typeof(x)) 
  
# Declare an integer by appending an L suffix.
y = 5L 
  
# print the class name of y
print(class(y)) 
  
# print the type of y
print(typeof(y)) 

Output:
[1] "integer"
[1] "integer"
[1] "integer"
[1] "integer"
Logical Datatype
R has logical data types that take either a value of true or false. A logical valu e is often
created via a comparison between variables.
# A simple R program
# to illustrate logical data type
  
# Sample values
x = 4 
y =3
  
# Comparing two values
z =x > y
  
# print the logical value
print(z)
  
# print the class name of z
print(class(z)) 
  
# print the type of z
print(typeof(z)) 

Output:
[1] TRUE
[1] "logical"
[1] "logical"
Complex Datatype
R supports complex data types which are set of all the complex numbers. The complex
data type is to store numbers with an imaginary component.

# A simple R program
# to illustrate complex data type
  
# Assign a complex value to x
x = 4 + 3i 
  
# print the class name of x
print(class(x)) 
  
# print the type of x // value
print(typeof(x)) 

Output:
[1] "complex"
[1] "complex"
Character Datatype
R supports character data types where you have all the alphabets and special characters. It
stores character values or strings. Strings in R can contain alphabets, numbers, and
symbols. The easiest way to denote that a value is of character type in R is to wrap t he
value inside single or double inverted commas.
# A simple R program
# to illustrate character data type
  
# Assign a character value to char
char = "Geeksforgeeks" 
  
# print the class name of char
print(class(char)) 
  
# print the type of char
print(typeof(char)) 

Output:
[1] "character"
[1] "character"
There are several tasks that can be done using data types. Let’s understand each task with
its action and the syntax for doing the task along with an R code to illustrate the task.
Find data type of an object
To find the data type of an object you have to use class() function. The syntax for doing
that is you need to pass the object as an argument to the function class() to find the data
type of an object.
Syntax:
class(object)
Example:
# A simple R program
# to find data type of an object
  
# Logical
print(class(TRUE))
  
# Integer
print(class(3L))
  
# Numeric
print(class(10.5))
  
# Complex
print(class(1+2i))
  
# Character
print(class("12-04-2020"))

Output:
[1] "logical"
[1] "integer"
[1] "numeric"
[1] "complex"
[1] "character"
Type verification
To do that, you need to use the prefix “is.” before the data type as a command. The
syntax for that is, is.data_type() of the object you have to verify.
Syntax:

is.data_type(object)
Example:
   
# A simple R program
# Verify if an object is of a certain datatype
  
# Logical
print(is.logical(TRUE))
  
# Integer
print(is.integer(3L))
  
# Numeric
print(is.numeric(10.5))
  
# Complex
print(is.complex(1+2i))
  
# Character
print(is.character("12-04-2020"))
  
print(is.integer("a"))
  
print(is.numeric(2+3i))

Output:
[1] TRUE
[1] TRUE
[1] TRUE
[1] TRUE
[1] TRUE
[1] FALSE
[1] FALSE
Coerce or convert the data type of an object to another
This task is interesting where you can change or convert the data type of one object to
another. To perform this action you have to use the prefix “as.” before the data type as
the command. The syntax for doing that is as.data_type() of the object which you want
to coerce.
Syntax:
as.data_type(object)
Note: All the coercions are not possible and if attempted will be returning an “NA”
value.
Example:
# A simple R program
# convert data type of an object to another
  
# Logical
print(as.numeric(TRUE))
  
# Integer
print(as.complex(3L))
  
# Numeric
print(as.logical(10.5))
  
# Complex
print(as.character(1+2i))
  
# Can't possible
print(as.numeric("12-04-2020"))

Output:
[1] 1
[1] 3+0i
[1] TRUE
[1] "1+2i"
[1] NA
Warning message:
In print(as.numeric("12-04-2020")) : NAs introduced by coercion

You might also like