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which.min Where is the Min() or Max() or first TRUE or FALSE ?
Description
Determines the location, i.e., index of the (first) minimum or maximum of a numeric (or logical) vector.
Usage
which.min(x)
which.max(x)
Arguments
x |
numeric (logical, integer or double) vector or an R object for which the internal coercion to |
Value
Missing and NaN values are discarded.
an integer or on 64-bit platforms, if length(x) =: n>= 2^31 an integer valued double of length 1 or 0 (iff x has no non-NAs), giving the index of the first minimum or maximum respectively of x.
If this extremum is unique (or empty), the results are the same as (but more efficient than) which(x == min(x, na.rm = TRUE)) or which(x == max(x, na.rm = TRUE)) respectively.
Logical x – First TRUE or FALSE
For a logical vector x with both FALSE and TRUE values, which.min(x) and which.max(x) return the index of the first FALSE or TRUE, respectively, as FALSE < TRUE. However, match(FALSE, x) or match(TRUE, x) are typically preferred, as they do indicate mismatches.
Author(s)
Martin Maechler
See Also
Use arrayInd(), if you need array/matrix indices instead of 1D vector ones.
which.is.max in package nnet differs in breaking ties at random (and having a ‘fuzz’ in the definition of ties).
Examples
x <- c(1:4, 0:5, 11)
which.min(x)
which.max(x)
## it *does* work with NA's present, by discarding them:
presidents[1:30]
range(presidents, na.rm = TRUE)
which.min(presidents) # 28
which.max(presidents) # 2
## Find the first occurrence, i.e. the first TRUE, if there is at least one:
x <- rpois(10000, lambda = 10); x[sample.int(50, 20)] <- NA
## where is the first value >= 20 ?
which.max(x >= 20)
## Also works for lists (which can be coerced to numeric vectors):
which.min(list(A = 7, pi = pi)) ## -> c(pi = 2L)
Copyright (©) 1999–2012 R Foundation for Statistical Computing.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License.