identical {base} | R Documentation |
The safe and reliable way to test two objects for being
exactly equal. It returns TRUE
in this case,
FALSE
in every other case.
identical(x, y)
x , y |
any R objects. |
A call to identical
is the way to test exact equality in
if
and while
statements, as well as in logical
expressions that use &&
or ||
. In all these
applications you need to be assured of getting a single logical
value.
Users often use the comparison operators, such as ==
or
!=
, in these situations. It looks natural, but it is not what
these operators are designed to do in R. They return an object like
the arguments. If you expected x
and y
to be of length
1, but it happened that one of them wasn't, you will not get a
single FALSE
. Similarly, if one of the arguments is NA
,
the result is also NA
. In either case, the expression
if(x == y)....
won't work as expected.
The function all.equal
is also sometimes used to test equality
this way, but was intended for something different: it allows for
small differences in numeric results.
The computations in identical
are also reliable and usually
fast. There should never be an error. The only known way to kill
identical
is by having an invalid pointer at the C level,
generating a memory fault. It will usually find inequality quickly.
Checking equality for two large, complicated objects can take longer
if the objects are identical or nearly so, but represent completely
independent copies. For most applications, however, the computational cost
should be negligible.
identical
sees NaN
as different from
NA_real_
, but all NaN
s are equal (and all NA
of the same type are equal).
Comparison of attributes view them as a set (and not a vector, so order is not tested).
A single logical value, TRUE
or FALSE
, never NA
and never anything other than a single value.
John Chambers and R Core
Chambers, J. M. (1998) Programming with Data. A Guide to the S Language. Springer.
all.equal
for descriptions of how two objects differ;
Comparison for operators that generate elementwise comparisons.
isTRUE
is a simple wrapper based on identical
.
identical(1, NULL) ## FALSE -- don't try this with ==
identical(1, 1.) ## TRUE in R (both are stored as doubles)
identical(1, as.integer(1)) ## FALSE, stored as different types
x <- 1.0; y <- 0.99999999999
## how to test for object equality allowing for numeric fuzz :
(E <- all.equal(x,y))
isTRUE(E) # which is simply defined to just use
identical(TRUE, E)
## If all.equal thinks the objects are different, it returns a
## character string, and the above expression evaluates to FALSE
# even for unusual R objects :
identical(.GlobalEnv, environment())