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For example:

a <- c(1,2,3) 

or

a = c(1,2,3).

Obviously for small data frames or lists, it won't matter at all. I am thinking more about big datasets or using them inside a for-loop.

Karolis Koncevičius
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Eduardo Barbaro
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1 Answers1

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No measurable performance difference; more about readability and convention. It's all the computations that R is doing that will make or break you.

Use <-; "R In Action" says on page 7 that it's standard and other R developers will make fun of you if you don't.

There might be a deeper reason in the R documentation:

There are three different assignment operators: two of them have leftwards and rightwards forms.

The operators <- and = assign into the environment in which they are evaluated.

The operator <- can be used anywhere, whereas the operator = is only allowed at the top level (e.g., in the complete expression typed at the command prompt) or as one of the subexpressions in a braced list of expressions.

It's usually a good idea to use the proper idiom of the language you're writing in.

duffymo
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