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spatstat (version 1.20-2)

lut: Lookup Tables

Description

Create a lookup table.

Usage

lut(outputs, ..., breaks=NULL, inputs=NULL)

Arguments

outputs
Vector of output values
...
Ignored.
inputs
Input values to which the output values are associated. A factor or vector of the same length as outputs. Incompatible with breaks.
breaks
Breakpoints for the lookup table. A numeric vector of length equal to length(outputs)+1.

Value

  • A function, which is also an object of class "lut".

Details

A lookup table is a function, mapping input values to output values.

The command lut creates an object representing a lookup table, which can then be used to control various behaviour in the spatstat package. It can also be used to compute the output value assigned to any input value.

The argument outputs specifies the output values to which input data values will be mapped. It should be a vector of any atomic type (e.g. numeric, logical, character, complex) or factor values.

Exactly one of the arguments inputs and breaks must be specified by name.

If inputs is given, then it should be a vector or factor, of the same length as outputs. The entries of inputs can be any atomic type (e.g. numeric, logical, character, complex) or factor values. The resulting lookup table associates the value inputs[i] with the value outputs[i].

If breaks is given, then it determines intervals of the real number line which are mapped to each output value. It should be a numeric vector, of length at least 2, with entries that are in increasing order. Infinite values are allowed. Any number in the range between breaks[i] and breaks[i+1] will be mapped to the value outputs[i].

The result is an object of class "lut". There is a print method for this class. Some plot commands in the spatstat package accept an object of this class as a specification of a lookup table.

The result is also a function f which can be used to compute the output value assigned to any input data value. That is, f(x) returns the output value assigned to x. This also works for vectors of input data values.

See Also

colourmap.

Examples

Run this code
# lookup table for real numbers, using breakpoints
  cr <- lut(factor(c("low", "medium", "high")), breaks=c(0,5,10,15))
  cr
  cr(3.2)
  cr(c(3,5,7))
  # lookup table for discrete set of values
  ct <- lut(c(0,1), inputs=c(FALSE, TRUE))
  ct(TRUE)

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