% File src/library/base/man/Constants.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2011 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{Constants} \alias{Constants} \alias{LETTERS} \alias{letters} \alias{month.abb} \alias{month.name} \alias{pi} \title{Built-in Constants} \description{ Constants built into \R. } \usage{ LETTERS letters month.abb month.name pi } \details{ \R has a small number of built-in constants. The following constants are available: \itemize{ \item \code{LETTERS}: the 26 upper-case letters of the Roman alphabet; \item \code{letters}: the 26 lower-case letters of the Roman alphabet; \item \code{month.abb}: the three-letter abbreviations for the English month names; \item \code{month.name}: the English names for the months of the year; \item \code{pi}: the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter. } These are implemented as variables in the base namespace taking appropriate values. } \references{ Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) \emph{The New S Language}. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole. } \seealso{ \code{\link{data}}, \code{\link{DateTimeClasses}}. \code{\link{Quotes}} for the parsing of character constants, \code{\link{NumericConstants}} for numeric constants. } \examples{% earlier R versions said 1705, but most refs say 1706. ## John Machin (ca 1706) computed pi to over 100 decimal places ## using the Taylor series expansion of the second term of pi - 4*(4*atan(1/5) - atan(1/239)) ## months in English month.name ## months in your current locale format(ISOdate(2000, 1:12, 1), "\%B") format(ISOdate(2000, 1:12, 1), "\%b") } \keyword{sysdata}