I'm using R 2.8.1 and it is possible to use both =
and <-
as variable assignment operators. What's the difference between them? Which one should I use?
From here:
The operators <- and = assign into the environment in which they are evaluated. The operator <- can be used anywhere, whereas the operator = is only allowed at the top level (e.g., in the complete expression typed at the command prompt) or as one of the subexpressions in a braced list of expressions.
-
5As
<-
can be used anywhere, does this mean that there is no need to use=
? – Mehper C. Palavuzlar Feb 16 '10 at 9:00 -
29No, you need to still need to use
=
when calling functions to avoid assigning globally. Look at these examples: mayin.org/ajayshah/KB/R/html/b1.html. If you usedname<-"paypal", x<-2, ...
it would setx
at the top level. Try running that example but writing<-
instead of=
and see what happens. – Mark Byers Feb 16 '10 at 9:07 -
1The documentation is (still to this day) wrong.
=
is not only allowed on the top level. Except for operator precedence, the<-
and=
assignment operators are completely identical by default. R complicates matters by giving=
a secondary syntactic meaning, besides its use as an assignment operator. – Konrad Rudolph Feb 13 '20 at 10:37
Reading from "Introducing Monte Carlo Methods with R", by Robert and Casella:
"The assignment operator is =
, not to be confused with ==
, which is the Boolean operator for equality. An older assignment operator is <-
and, for compatibility reasons, it still remains functional, but it should be ignored to ensure cleaner programming.
(As pointed out by Spector, P. (2009). 'Data Manipulation with R' - Section 8.7., an exception is when using system.time
, since = is then used to identify keywords)
A misleading feature of the assignment operator <- is found in Boolean expressions such as
> if (x[1]<-2) ...
which is supposed to test whether or not x[1] is less than -2 but ends up allocating 2 to x[1], erasing its current value! Note also that using
> if (x[1]=-2) ...
mistakenly instead of (x[1]==-2) has the same consequence."
-
I also think that
global assignment
, whatever the need for doing something like this, can only be performed using the ("gets"-based)<<-
operator, and that there is not an "equals"-based equivalent. – George Dontas Feb 16 '10 at 14:59 -
8Google's R style guide says the opposite: google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/… – Mark Byers Aug 8 '10 at 9:52
-
if (x[1]=-2)
is conveniently prohibited to prevent this kind of error. Specifically, the operator=
is only allowed at the top level. – Aaron left Stack Overflow Mar 14 '11 at 13:56 -
3