Learn R Programming

base (version 3.3)

rep: Replicate Elements of Vectors and Lists

Description

rep replicates the values in x. It is a generic function, and the (internal) default method is described here.

rep.int and rep_len are faster simplified versions for two common cases. They are not generic.

Usage

rep(x, ...)
rep.int(x, times)
rep_len(x, length.out)

Arguments

x
a vector (of any mode including a list) or a factor or (for rep only) a POSIXct or POSIXlt or Date object; or an S4 object containing such an object.
...
further arguments to be passed to or from other methods. For the internal default method these can include:
times
A integer vector giving the (non-negative) number of times to repeat each element if of length length(x), or to repeat the whole vector if of length 1. Negative or NA values are an error.

length.out
non-negative integer. The desired length of the output vector. Other inputs will be coerced to an integer vector and the first element taken. Ignored if NA or invalid.

each
non-negative integer. Each element of x is repeated each times. Other inputs will be coerced to an integer vector and the first element taken. Treated as 1 if NA or invalid.

times
see ....
length.out
non-negative integer: the desired length of the output vector.

Value

An object of the same type as x.rep.int and rep_len return no attributes (except the class if returning a factor).The default method of rep gives the result names (which will almost always contain duplicates) if x had names, but retains no other attributes.

Details

The default behaviour is as if the call was
  rep(x, times = 1, length.out = NA, each = 1)
. Normally just one of the additional arguments is specified, but if each is specified with either of the other two, its replication is performed first, and then that implied by times or length.out.

If times consists of a single integer, the result consists of the whole input repeated this many times. If times is a vector of the same length as x (after replication by each), the result consists of x[1] repeated times[1] times, x[2] repeated times[2] times and so on.

length.out may be given in place of times, in which case x is repeated as many times as is necessary to create a vector of this length. If both are given, length.out takes priority and times is ignored.

Non-integer values of times will be truncated towards zero. If times is a computed quantity it is prudent to add a small fuzz or use round. And analogously for each.

If x has length zero and length.out is supplied and is positive, the values are filled in using the extraction rules, that is by an NA of the appropriate class for an atomic vector (0 for raw vectors) and NULL for a list.

References

Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.

See Also

seq, sequence, replicate.

Examples

Run this code
rep(1:4, 2)
rep(1:4, each = 2)       # not the same.
rep(1:4, c(2,2,2,2))     # same as second.
rep(1:4, c(2,1,2,1))
rep(1:4, each = 2, len = 4)    # first 4 only.
rep(1:4, each = 2, len = 10)   # 8 integers plus two recycled 1's.
rep(1:4, each = 2, times = 3)  # length 24, 3 complete replications

rep(1, 40*(1-.8)) # length 7 on most platforms
rep(1, 40*(1-.8)+1e-7) # better

## replicate a list
fred <- list(happy = 1:10, name = "squash")
rep(fred, 5)

# date-time objects
x <- .leap.seconds[1:3]
rep(x, 2)
rep(as.POSIXlt(x), rep(2, 3))

## named factor
x <- factor(LETTERS[1:4]); names(x) <- letters[1:4]
x
rep(x, 2)
rep(x, each = 2)
rep.int(x, 2)  # no names
rep_len(x, 10)

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab