% File src/library/base/man/c.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2013 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{c} \title{Combine Values into a Vector or List} \usage{ c(\dots, recursive = FALSE) } \alias{c} \description{ This is a generic function which combines its arguments. The default method combines its arguments to form a vector. All arguments are coerced to a common type which is the type of the returned value, and all attributes except names are removed. } \arguments{ \item{\dots}{objects to be concatenated.} \item{recursive}{logical. If \code{recursive = TRUE}, the function recursively descends through lists (and pairlists) combining all their elements into a vector.} } \details{ The output type is determined from the highest type of the components in the hierarchy NULL < raw < logical < integer < double < complex < character < list < expression. Pairlists are treated as lists, but non-vector components (such names and calls) are treated as one-element lists which cannot be unlisted even if \code{recursive = TRUE}. \code{c} is sometimes used for its side effect of removing attributes except names, for example to turn an array into a vector. \code{as.vector} is a more intuitive way to do this, but also drops names. Note too that methods other than the default are not required to do this (and they will almost certainly preserve a class attribute). This is a \link{primitive} function. } \value{ \code{NULL} or an expression or a vector of an appropriate mode. (With no arguments the value is \code{NULL}.) } \section{S4 methods}{ This function is S4 generic, but with argument list \code{(x, ..., recursive = FALSE)}. } \references{ Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) \emph{The New S Language}. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole. } \seealso{ \code{\link{unlist}} and \code{\link{as.vector}} to produce attribute-free vectors. } \examples{ c(1,7:9) c(1:5, 10.5, "next") ## uses with a single argument to drop attributes x <- 1:4 names(x) <- letters[1:4] x c(x) # has names as.vector(x) # no names dim(x) <- c(2,2) x c(x) as.vector(x) ## append to a list: ll <- list(A = 1, c = "C") ## do *not* use c(ll, d = 1:3) # which is == c(ll, as.list(c(d = 1:3)) ## but rather c(ll, d = list(1:3)) # c() combining two lists c(list(A = c(B = 1)), recursive = TRUE) c(options(), recursive = TRUE) c(list(A = c(B = 1, C = 2), B = c(E = 7)), recursive = TRUE) } \keyword{manip}