>>>>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>>>> on Thu, 2 Oct 2008 10:02:04 -0700 writes:
> Sorry, I must be looking at a different section but when I look at 3.4 in
r-intro.pdf I see:
> 3.4 The class of an object
> All objects in R have a class, reported by the function class. For simple
vectors this is just the
> mode, for example "numeric", "logical", "character" or "list", but
"matrix", "array",
> "factor" and "data.frame" are other possible values.
> . . . .
> This doesn't seem to indicate how/why plot shows a time series for the
"exact" inverse fft yet shows Re vs. Im in a filtered version.
Then read on, or start re-reading the introduction from the
beginning. In addition to know about classes, you really *must*
understand a bit about generic functions and methods before you
can understand more.
Martin
> ---- Dieter Menne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> <rkevinburton <at> charter.net> writes:
>>
>> >
>> > My question is how does 'plot' know to implicilty call the plot.ts (in
the
>> case of the full "exact" spectrum
>> > being fed back into the inverse?
>>
>> So the title should be "How does the specific incarnation of object
orientation
>> in R work?" Try, for example, section 3.4 and the "generic" classes in
the
>> R-intro.pdf
Yes!
>> Dieter
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