% File src/library/base/man/dimnames.Rd % Part of the R package, http://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2007 R Core Development Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{dimnames} \title{Dimnames of an Object} \alias{dimnames} \alias{dimnames<-} \alias{dimnames.data.frame} \alias{dimnames<-.data.frame} \description{ Retrieve or set the dimnames of an object. } \usage{ dimnames(x) dimnames(x) <- value } \arguments{ \item{x}{an \R object, for example a matrix, array or data frame.} \item{value}{a possible value for \code{dimnames(x)}: see the Value section.} } \details{ The functions \code{dimnames} and \code{dimnames<-} are generic. For an \code{\link{array}} (and hence in particular, for a \code{\link{matrix}}), they retrieve or set the \code{dimnames} attribute (see \link{attributes}) of the object. A list \code{value} can have names, and these will be used to label the dimensions of the array where appropriate. The replacement method for arrays/matrices coerces vector and factor elements of \code{value} to character, but does not dispatch methods for \code{as.character}. It coerces zero-length elements to \code{NULL}. Both have methods for data frames. The dimnames of a data frame are its \code{\link{row.names}} and its \code{\link{names}}. For the replacement method each component of \code{value} will be coerced by \code{\link{as.character}}. For a 1D matrix the \code{\link{names}} are the same thing as the (only) component of the \code{dimnames}. } \value{ The dimnames of a matrix or array can be \code{NULL} or a list of the same length as \code{dim(x)}. If a list, its components are either \code{NULL} or a character vector with positive length of the appropriate dimension of \code{x}. For the \code{"data.frame"} method both dimnames are character vectors, and the rownames must contain no duplicates nor missing values. } \note{ Setting components of the dimnames, e.g. \code{dimnames(A)[[1]] <- value} is a common paradigm, but note that it will not work if the value assigned is \code{NULL}. Use \code{\link{rownames}} instead, or (as it does) manipulate the whole dimnames list. } \references{ Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) \emph{The New S Language}. Wadsworth \& Brooks/Cole. } \seealso{ \code{\link{rownames}}, \code{\link{colnames}}; \code{\link{array}}, \code{\link{matrix}}, \code{\link{data.frame}}. } \examples{ ## simple versions of rownames and colnames ## could be defined as follows rownames0 <- function(x) dimnames(x)[[1]] colnames0 <- function(x) dimnames(x)[[2]] } \keyword{array} \keyword{manip}