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We can perform string concatenation in R language using the paste()
and cat()
methods.
In this tutorial, let us explore the various methods available to concatenate strings in r and how to use these methods with examples.
How to Concatenate Strings in R?
String concatenation is a process of joining two or more strings into a single string. R language provides two different methods for string concatenation.
Concatenate Strings using the paste() method in R
paste()
method is the most common and widely used method for string concatenation in R.
The paste()
method can take multiple strings as an input, combine them, and return a concatenated string as an output.
Syntax
paste(string1, string2, …stringn, sep = “”, collapse=NULL)
Parameters
- string1, string2, …stringn: Input strings that need to be concatenated.
- sep: The separator that needs to be appended during the concatenation. If you don’t pass this argument, it will take space as the default separator.
- collapse : an optional character string to separate the results.
Example 1 – Concatenate two or more strings in R using the paste() method
The paste()
method accepts two or more string as input, and returns a concatenated string as output.
output1 <- paste("R","Programming") output2 <- paste("R","Programming","is","fun") output1 output2
Output
"R Programming" "R Programming is fun"
Example 2 – Concatenate strings with a separator in R using the paste() method
In the first example, we did not pass a value to sep
the argument and it used a default separator as whitespace while concatenating the string.
Let us extend our example to see how to pass a separator argument and concatenate the string in R.
output1 <- paste("R","Programming",sep = '-') output2 <- paste("R","Python", "NumPy","Pandas",sep = ',') output1 output2
Output
"R-Programming" "R,Python,NumPy,Pandas"
Concatenate Strings using the cat() method in R
The cat()
method works similarly to the paste()
method. It can perform a character-wise concatenation and print the concatenated string as output, and also we can save the concatenated string into a file.
Syntax
cat(… , file = "", sep = " ", fill = FALSE, labels = NULL, append = FALSE)
Parameters
- …: R objects to concatenate
- file (optional): The name of the file where the output is printed
- sep (optional): The separator that needs to be appended during the concatenation. If you don’t pass this argument, it will take space as the default separator.
- fill (optional): A logical or positive numeric which represents how the output will be broken into successive lines. The default value is false.
- labels (optional): A character vector of labels for the lines printed. Ignored if
fill
isFALSE
. - append (optional): Required when you print the output to the file. If we pass ‘
TRUE
‘ the output will be appended to the file otherwise it will overwrite the contents of the file.
Example 1 – Concatenate two or more strings in R using the cat() method
The cat()
method accepts two or more objects as input and returns a concatenated string as output.
firstName <- "Chandler" middleName <- "R" lastName <- "Bing" cat(firstName, middleName, lastName)
Output
Chandler R Bing
Example 2 – Concatenate Strings in R with a separator using the cat() method
In the below example we use the cat()
method to concatenate two or more string objects and use a custom separator.
firstName <- "Chandler" middleName <- "R" lastName <- "Bing" cat(firstName, middleName, lastName, sep = "-") cat(firstName, middleName, lastName, sep = ",")
Output
Chandler-R-Bing Chandler,R,Bing
Example 3 – Concatenate Strings in R and output results to file using the cat() method
In the below example we use the cat()
method to concatenate two or more string objects and output the results to the CSV files, Text files, or any other file format.
The name.txt file gets created in the working directory.
firstName <- "Chandler" middleName <- "R" lastName <- "Bing" cat(firstName, middleName, lastName, sep ="\n", file="name.txt")
Output
Example 4 – Concatenate Strings in R and append results to the file using the cat() method
In the below example we use the cat()
method to concatenate two or more string objects and append the results to the file.
The name.txt file gets created in the working directory.
firstName <- "Ross" middleName <- "P" lastName <- "Taylor" cat(firstName, middleName, lastName, sep ="\n", file="name.txt" , append=TRUE)
Output
Conclusion
String concatenation is a process of joining two or more strings into a single string. We can perform string concatenation in R using the paste()
and cat()
methods.
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