R - Operators (2024)

R - Operators (1)

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An operator is a symbol that tells the compiler to perform specific mathematical or logical manipulations. R language is rich in built-in operators and provides following types of operators.

Types of Operators

We have the following types of operators in R programming −

  • Arithmetic Operators
  • Relational Operators
  • Logical Operators
  • Assignment Operators
  • Miscellaneous Operators

Arithmetic Operators

Following table shows the arithmetic operators supported by R language. The operators act on each element of the vector.

OperatorDescriptionExample
+Adds two vectors
v <- c( 2,5.5,6)t <- c(8, 3, 4)print(v&plus;t)

it produces the following result −

[1] 10.0 8.5 10.0
Subtracts second vector from the first
v <- c( 2,5.5,6)t <- c(8, 3, 4)print(v-t)

it produces the following result −

[1] -6.0 2.5 2.0
*Multiplies both vectors
v <- c( 2,5.5,6)t <- c(8, 3, 4)print(v*t)

it produces the following result −

[1] 16.0 16.5 24.0
/Divide the first vector with the second
v <- c( 2,5.5,6)t <- c(8, 3, 4)print(v/t)

When we execute the above code, it produces the following result −

[1] 0.250000 1.833333 1.500000
%%Give the remainder of the first vector with the second
v <- c( 2,5.5,6)t <- c(8, 3, 4)print(v%%t)

it produces the following result −

[1] 2.0 2.5 2.0
%/%The result of division of first vector with second (quotient)
v <- c( 2,5.5,6)t <- c(8, 3, 4)print(v%/%t)

it produces the following result −

[1] 0 1 1
^The first vector raised to the exponent of second vector
v <- c( 2,5.5,6)t <- c(8, 3, 4)print(v^t)

it produces the following result −

[1] 256.000 166.375 1296.000

Relational Operators

Following table shows the relational operators supported by R language. Each element of the first vector is compared with the corresponding element of the second vector. The result of comparison is a Boolean value.

OperatorDescriptionExample
>Checks if each element of the first vector is greater than the corresponding element of the second vector.
v <- c(2,5.5,6,9)t <- c(8,2.5,14,9)print(v>t)

it produces the following result −

[1] FALSE TRUE FALSE FALSE
<Checks if each element of the first vector is less than the corresponding element of the second vector.
v <- c(2,5.5,6,9)t <- c(8,2.5,14,9)print(v < t)

it produces the following result −

[1] TRUE FALSE TRUE FALSE
==Checks if each element of the first vector is equal to the corresponding element of the second vector.
v <- c(2,5.5,6,9)t <- c(8,2.5,14,9)print(v == t)

it produces the following result −

[1] FALSE FALSE FALSE TRUE
<=Checks if each element of the first vector is less than or equal to the corresponding element of the second vector.
v <- c(2,5.5,6,9)t <- c(8,2.5,14,9)print(v<=t)

it produces the following result −

[1] TRUE FALSE TRUE TRUE
>=Checks if each element of the first vector is greater than or equal to the corresponding element of the second vector.
v <- c(2,5.5,6,9)t <- c(8,2.5,14,9)print(v>=t)

it produces the following result −

[1] FALSE TRUE FALSE TRUE
!=Checks if each element of the first vector is unequal to the corresponding element of the second vector.
v <- c(2,5.5,6,9)t <- c(8,2.5,14,9)print(v!=t)

it produces the following result −

[1] TRUE TRUE TRUE FALSE

Logical Operators

Following table shows the logical operators supported by R language. It is applicable only to vectors of type logical, numeric or complex. All numbers greater than 1 are considered as logical value TRUE.

Each element of the first vector is compared with the corresponding element of the second vector. The result of comparison is a Boolean value.

OperatorDescriptionExample
&It is called Element-wise Logical AND operator. It combines each element of the first vector with the corresponding element of the second vector and gives a output TRUE if both the elements are TRUE.
v <- c(3,1,TRUE,2&plus;3i)t <- c(4,1,FALSE,2&plus;3i)print(v&t)

it produces the following result −

[1] TRUE TRUE FALSE TRUE
|It is called Element-wise Logical OR operator. It combines each element of the first vector with the corresponding element of the second vector and gives a output TRUE if one the elements is TRUE.
v <- c(3,0,TRUE,2&plus;2i)t <- c(4,0,FALSE,2&plus;3i)print(v|t)

it produces the following result −

[1] TRUE FALSE TRUE TRUE
!It is called Logical NOT operator. Takes each element of the vector and gives the opposite logical value.
v <- c(3,0,TRUE,2&plus;2i)print(!v)

it produces the following result −

[1] FALSE TRUE FALSE FALSE

The logical operator && and || considers only the first element of the vectors and give a vector of single element as output.

OperatorDescriptionExample
&&Called Logical AND operator. Takes first element of both the vectors and gives the TRUE only if both are TRUE.
v <- c(3,0,TRUE,2&plus;2i)t <- c(1,3,TRUE,2&plus;3i)print(v&&t)

it produces the following result −

[1] TRUE
||Called Logical OR operator. Takes first element of both the vectors and gives the TRUE if one of them is TRUE.
v <- c(0,0,TRUE,2&plus;2i)t <- c(0,3,TRUE,2&plus;3i)print(v||t)

it produces the following result −

[1] FALSE

Assignment Operators

These operators are used to assign values to vectors.

OperatorDescriptionExample

<−

or

=

or

<<−

Called Left Assignment
v1 <- c(3,1,TRUE,2&plus;3i)v2 <<- c(3,1,TRUE,2&plus;3i)v3 = c(3,1,TRUE,2&plus;3i)print(v1)print(v2)print(v3)

it produces the following result −

[1] 3&plus;0i 1&plus;0i 1&plus;0i 2&plus;3i[1] 3&plus;0i 1&plus;0i 1&plus;0i 2&plus;3i[1] 3&plus;0i 1&plus;0i 1&plus;0i 2&plus;3i

->

or

->>

Called Right Assignment
c(3,1,TRUE,2&plus;3i) -> v1c(3,1,TRUE,2&plus;3i) ->> v2 print(v1)print(v2)

it produces the following result −

[1] 3&plus;0i 1&plus;0i 1&plus;0i 2&plus;3i[1] 3&plus;0i 1&plus;0i 1&plus;0i 2&plus;3i

Miscellaneous Operators

These operators are used to for specific purpose and not general mathematical or logical computation.

OperatorDescriptionExample
:Colon operator. It creates the series of numbers in sequence for a vector.
v <- 2:8print(v) 

it produces the following result −

[1] 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
%in%This operator is used to identify if an element belongs to a vector.
v1 <- 8v2 <- 12t <- 1:10print(v1 %in% t) print(v2 %in% t) 

it produces the following result −

[1] TRUE[1] FALSE
%*%This operator is used to multiply a matrix with its transpose.
M = matrix( c(2,6,5,1,10,4), nrow = 2,ncol = 3,byrow = TRUE)t = M %*% t(M)print(t)

it produces the following result −

 [,1] [,2][1,] 65 82[2,] 82 117

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R - Operators (2024)
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