combn {utils}R Documentation

Generate All Combinations of n Elements, Taken m at a Time

Description

Generate all combinations of the elements of x taken m at a time. If x is a positive integer, returns all combinations of the elements of seq(x) taken m at a time. If argument FUN is not NULL, applies a function given by the argument to each point. If simplify is FALSE, returns a list; otherwise returns an array, typically a matrix. ... are passed unchanged to the FUN function, if specified.

Usage

combn(x, m, FUN = NULL, simplify = TRUE, ...)

Arguments

x vector source for combinations, or integer n for x <- seq(n).
m number of elements to choose.
FUN function to be applied to each combination; default NULL means the identity, i.e., to return the combination (vector of length m).
simplify logical indicating if the result should be simplified to an array (typically a matrix); if FALSE, the function returns a list. Note that when simplify = TRUE as by default, the dimension of the result is simply determined from FUN(\emph{<1st combination>}), for efficiency reasons. This will badly fail if FUN(u) is not of constant length.
... optionally, further arguments to FUN.

Value

a list or array (in nondegenerate cases), see the simplify argument above.

Author(s)

Scott Chasalow wrote the original in 1994 for S; R package combinat and documentation by Vince Carey stvjc@channing.harvard.edu; small changes by the R core team, notably to return an array in all cases of simplify = TRUE, e.g., for combn(5,5).

References

Nijenhuis, A. and Wilf, H.S. (1978) Combinatorial Algorithms for Computers and Calculators; Academic Press, NY.

See Also

choose for fast computation of the number of combinations. expand.grid for creating a data frame from all combinations of factors or vectors.

Examples

combn(letters[1:4], 2)
(m <- combn(10, 5, min))   # minimum value in each combination
mm <- combn(15, 6, function(x) matrix(x, 2,3))
stopifnot(round(choose(10,5)) == length(m),
          c(2,3, round(choose(15,6))) == dim(mm))

## Different way of encoding points:
combn(c(1,1,1,1,2,2,2,3,3,4), 3, tabulate, nbins = 4)

## Compute support points and (scaled) probabilities for a
## Multivariate-Hypergeometric(n = 3, N = c(4,3,2,1)) p.f.:
# table.mat(t(combn(c(1,1,1,1,2,2,2,3,3,4), 3, tabulate,nbins=4)))

[Package utils version 2.5.0 Index]