On 12-01-25 7:04 AM, Federico Calboli wrote:
On 25 Jan 2012, at 11:54, Duncan Murdoch wrote:
I think the documentation for cat is a little ambiguous, but it is working as documented 
if I read "If any element of sep contains a newline character," to mean that 
the element consists of a newline and nothing else.  I'm not sure if that was the 
intended reading or not.

I don't know about the reading, but if memory serves me well, once upon a time 
cat would not automatically go to a newline, i.e.

cat(1, file = '')

1>

so I'd have to explictly set the newline as a separator:

cat(1, file= '', sep = '\n')

1

I don't think that has changed.

Duncan Murdoch




Though I admit my memory could be wrong. Thank you for the solution btw.

BW

Federico






How would I overcome this issue? I tried a number of things, all of which have 
failed.


I'd use sprintf for that, i.e. something like

count<- c(3, 17, 15)
pct<- c(20, 30, 31)
cat(sprintf("%d (%d%%)\n", count, pct), sep="")

where count and pct are the vectors of values to go into the display.

Duncan Murdoch

--
Federico C. F. Calboli
Neuroepidemiology and Ageing Research
Imperial College, St. Mary's Campus
Norfolk Place, London W2 1PG

Tel +44 (0)20 75941602   Fax +44 (0)20 75943193

f.calboli [.a.t] imperial.ac.uk
f.calboli [.a.t] gmail.com


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