log computes logarithms, by default natural logarithms,
log10 computes common (i.e., base 10) logarithms, and
log2 computes binary (i.e., base 2) logarithms.
The general form log(x, base) computes logarithms with base
base. log1p(x) computes \(\log(1+x)\) accurately also for
\(|x| \ll 1\). exp computes the exponential function. expm1(x) computes \(\exp(x) - 1\) accurately also for
\(|x| \ll 1\).log(x, base = exp(1))
logb(x, base = exp(1))
log10(x)
log2(x)log1p(x)
exp(x)
expm1(x)
exp(1).x containing the transformed
values. log(0) gives -Inf, and log(x) for
negative values of x is NaN. exp(-Inf) is 0. For complex inputs to the log functions, the value is a complex number
with imaginary part in the range \([-\pi, \pi]\): which
end of the range is used might be platform-specific.exp, expm1, log, log10, log2 and
log1p are S4 generic and are members of the
Math group generic. Note that this means that the S4 generic for log has a
signature with only one argument, x, but that base can
be passed to methods (but will not be used for method selection). On
the other hand, if you only set a method for the Math group
generic then base argument of log will be ignored for
your class.logb are generic functions: methods can be defined
for them individually or via the Math
group generic. log10 and log2 are only convenience wrappers, but logs
to bases 10 and 2 (whether computed via log or the wrappers)
will be computed more efficiently and accurately where supported by the OS.
Methods can be set for them individually (and otherwise methods for
log will be used). logb is a wrapper for log for compatibility with S. If
(S3 or S4) methods are set for log they will be dispatched.
Do not set S4 methods on logb itself. All except log are primitive functions.log, log10 and exp.) Chambers, J. M. (1998)
Programming with Data. A Guide to the S Language.
Springer. (for logb.)Trig,
sqrt,
Arithmetic.log(exp(3))
log10(1e7) # = 7
x <- 10^-(1+2*1:9)
cbind(x, log(1+x), log1p(x), exp(x)-1, expm1(x))
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