The list of methods that apply to Surv
objects
# S3 method for Surv
anyDuplicated(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
as.character(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
as.data.frame(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
as.integer(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
as.matrix(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
as.numeric(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
c(...)
# S3 method for Surv
duplicated(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
format(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
head(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
is.na(x)
# S3 method for Surv
length(x)
# S3 method for Surv
mean(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
median(x, na.rm=FALSE, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
names(x)
# S3 method for Surv
names(x) <- value
# S3 method for Surv
quantile(x, probs, na.rm=FALSE, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
plot(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
rep(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
rep.int(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
rep_len(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
rev(x)
# S3 method for Surv
t(x)
# S3 method for Surv
tail(x, ...)
# S3 method for Surv
unique(x, ...)
a Surv
object
a vector of probabilities
remove missing values from the calculation
a character vector of up to the same length as x
, or
NULL
other arguments to the method
These functions extend the standard methods to Surv
objects.
The arguments and results from these are mostly as expected, with the
following further details:
The as.character
function uses "5+" for right censored
at time 5, "5-" for left censored at time 5, "[2,7]" for an
observation that was interval censored between 2 and 7,
"(1,6]" for a counting process data denoting an observation which
was at risk from time 1 to 6, with an event at time 6, and
"(1,6+]" for an observation over the same interval but not ending
with and event.
For a multi-state survival object the type of event is appended to
the event time using ":type".
The print
and format
methods make use of
as.character
.
The as.numeric
and as.integer
methods perform
these actions on the survival times, but do not affect the
censoring indicator.
The as.matrix
and t
methods return a matrix
The length
of a Surv
object is the number of
survival times it contains, not the number of items required to
encode it, e.g., x <- Surv(1:4, 5:9, c(1,0,1,0)); length(x)
has a value of 4.
Likewise names(x)
will be NULL or a vector of length 4.
(For technical reasons, any names are actually stored in the
rownames
attribute of the object.)
For a multi-state survival object levels
returns the
names of the endpoints, otherwise it is NULL.
The median
, quantile
and plot
methods
first construct a survival curve using survfit
, then apply
the appropriate method to that curve.
The concatonation method c()
is asymmetric, its first
argument determines the exection path. For instance
c(Surv(1:4), Surv(5:6))
will concatonate the two objects,
c(Surv(1:4), 5:6)
will give an error, and
c(5:6, Surv(1:4))
is equivalent to
c(5:6, as.vector(Surv(1:4)))
.
Surv