X-Git-Url: https://git.donarmstrong.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=man%2FDNAbin.Rd;h=e9535306f1ec2f4dd2a16f4d7b34fe73c7793707;hb=ce466967e4824b3f6aec6f75798da08fe8c10666;hp=bce0df2da8998c237f3a22dc7c78bd19627e1669;hpb=f295ab19440298e543db5a270e54f10a84382197;p=ape.git diff --git a/man/DNAbin.Rd b/man/DNAbin.Rd index bce0df2..e953530 100644 --- a/man/DNAbin.Rd +++ b/man/DNAbin.Rd @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ are dropped.} \item{i, j}{indices of the rows and/or columns to select or to drop. They may be numeric, logical, or character (in the same way than for - standard R objects).} + standard \R objects).} \item{drop}{logical; if \code{TRUE}, the returned object is of the lowest possible dimension.} \item{recursive}{for compatibility with the generic (unused).} @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ \details{ These are all `methods' of generic functions which are here applied to DNA sequences stored as objects of class \code{"DNAbin"}. They are - used in the same way than the standard R functions to manipulate + used in the same way than the standard \R functions to manipulate vectors, matrices, and lists. Additionally, the operators \code{[[} and \code{$} may be used to extract a vector from a list. Note that the default of \code{drop} is not the same than the generic operator: @@ -85,7 +85,8 @@ \author{Emmanuel Paradis} \seealso{ \code{\link{as.DNAbin}}, \code{\link{read.dna}}, - \code{\link{read.GenBank}}, \code{\link{write.dna}} + \code{\link{read.GenBank}}, \code{\link{write.dna}}, , + \code{\link{image.DNAbin}} The corresponding generic functions are documented in the package \pkg{base}. @@ -93,9 +94,8 @@ \examples{ data(woodmouse) woodmouse -summary(woodmouse) -summary(woodmouse, 15, 6) -summary(woodmouse[1:5, 1:300], 15, 6) +print(woodmouse, 15, 6) +print(woodmouse[1:5, 1:300], 15, 6) ### Just to show how distances could be influenced by sampling: dist.dna(woodmouse[1:2, ]) dist.dna(woodmouse[1:3, ])