I have found that order() fails in a rather arcane circumstance, as in this example:
> foo <- I( c('x','\265g') ) > order(foo) Error in if (xi > xj) 1L else -1L : missing value where TRUE/FALSE needed > foo <-c('x','\265g') > order(foo) [1] 1 2 > sessionInfo() R version 3.1.1 (2014-07-10) Platform: x86_64-apple-darwin13.1.0 (64-bit) locale: [1] C attached base packages: [1] stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods base Thanks -Don p.s. Just a little background, irrelevant unless one wonders why I¹m using I() and \265: If I were writing new code I wouldn¹t be using I(), since there are better ways now to achieve the same end (preventing the creation of factors in data frames), but the scripts that use it are quite old, originally developed in 2001. In at least some but perhaps limited contexts, Œ\265¹ produces the greek letter mu, and that¹s why I¹m using it. And if I remember correctly, 2001 is prior to the current R support for locales and extended character sets. Using \265 is what I could find at that time to get a mu into my output. I came across this while checking some things; it¹s not actually breaking my scripts, so I doubt it¹s due to any recent change. -- Don MacQueen Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory 7000 East Ave., L-627 Livermore, CA 94550 925-423-1062 ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel