% File src/library/base/man/print.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{print} \title{Print Values} \usage{ print(x, \dots) \method{print}{factor}(x, quote = FALSE, max.levels = NULL, width = getOption("width"), \dots) \method{print}{table}(x, digits = getOption("digits"), quote = FALSE, na.print = "", zero.print = "0", justify = "none", \dots) } \alias{print} \alias{print.factor} \alias{print.htest} \alias{print.listof} \alias{print.simple.list} \alias{print.table} \description{ \code{print} prints its argument and returns it \emph{invisibly} (via \code{\link{invisible}(x)}). It is a generic function which means that new printing methods can be easily added for new \code{\link[base]{class}}es. } \arguments{ \item{x}{an object used to select a method.} \item{\dots}{further arguments passed to or from other methods.} \item{quote}{logical, indicating whether or not strings should be printed with surrounding quotes.} \item{max.levels}{integer, indicating how many levels should be printed for a factor; if \code{0}, no extra "Levels" line will be printed. The default, \code{NULL}, entails choosing \code{max.levels} such that the levels print on one line of width \code{width}.} \item{width}{only used when \code{max.levels} is NULL, see above.} \item{digits}{minimal number of \emph{significant} digits, see \code{\link{print.default}}.} \item{na.print}{character string (or \code{NULL}) indicating \code{\link{NA}} values in printed output, see \code{\link{print.default}}.} \item{zero.print}{character specifying how zeros (\code{0}) should be printed; for sparse tables, using \code{"."} can produce stronger results.} \item{justify}{character indicating if strings should left- or right-justified or left alone, passed to \code{\link{format}}.} } \details{ The default method, \code{\link{print.default}} has its own help page. Use \code{\link{methods}("print")} to get all the methods for the \code{print} generic. \code{print.factor} allows some customization and is used for printing \code{\link{ordered}} factors as well. \code{print.table} for printing \code{\link{table}}s allows other customization. See \code{\link{noquote}} as an example of a class whose main purpose is a specific \code{print} method. } \references{ Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. (1992) \emph{Statistical Models in S.} Wadsworth \& Brooks/Cole. } \seealso{ The default method \code{\link{print.default}}, and help for the methods above; further \code{\link{options}}, \code{\link{noquote}}. For more customizable (but cumbersome) printing, see \code{\link{cat}}, \code{\link{format}} or also \code{\link{write}}. } \examples{ require(stats) ts(1:20)#-- print is the "Default function" --> print.ts(.) is called rr <- for(i in 1:3) print(1:i) rr ## Printing of factors attenu$station ## 117 levels -> 'max.levels' depending on width ## ordered factors: levels "l1 < l2 < .." esoph$agegp[1:12] esoph$alcgp[1:12] ## Printing of sparse (contingency) tables set.seed(521) t1 <- round(abs(rt(200, df=1.8))) t2 <- round(abs(rt(200, df=1.4))) table(t1,t2) # simple print(table(t1,t2), zero.print = ".")# nicer to read } \keyword{print}