These unary and binary operators perform arithmetic on numeric or complex vectors (or objects which can be coerced to them).
+ x
- x
x + y
x - y
x * y
x / y
x ^ y
x %% y
x %/% ynumeric or complex vectors or objects which can be coerced to such, or other objects for which methods have been written.
Unary + and unary - return a numeric or complex vector.
  All attributes (including class) are preserved if there is no
  coercion: logical x is coerced to integer and names, dims and
  dimnames are preserved.
The binary operators return vectors containing the result of the element
  by element operations.  If involving a zero-length vector the result
  has length zero.  Otherwise, the elements of shorter vectors are recycled
  as necessary (with a warning when they are recycled only
  fractionally).  The operators are + for addition,
  - for subtraction, * for multiplication, / for
  division and ^ for exponentiation.
%% indicates x mod y (“x modulo y”) and
  %/% indicates integer division.  It is guaranteed that
 x == (x %% y) + y * (x %/% y) (up to rounding error)
unless y == 0 where the result of %% is
  NA_integer_ or NaN (depending on the
  typeof of the arguments) or for some non-finite
  arguments, e.g., when the RHS of the identity above
  amounts to Inf - Inf.
If either argument is complex the result will be complex, otherwise if
  one or both arguments are numeric, the result will be numeric.  If
  both arguments are of type integer, the type of the result of
  / and ^ is numeric and for the other operators it
  is integer (with overflow, which occurs at
  \(\pm(2^{31} - 1)\),
  returned as NA_integer_ with a warning).
The rules for determining the attributes of the result are rather
  complicated.  Most attributes are taken from the longer argument.
  Names will be copied from the first if it is the same length as the
  answer, otherwise from the second if that is.  If the arguments are
  the same length, attributes will be copied from both, with those of
  the first argument taking precedence when the same attribute is
  present in both arguments. For time series, these operations are
  allowed only if the series are compatible, when the class and
  tsp attribute of whichever is a time series (the same,
  if both are) are used.  For arrays (and an array result) the
  dimensions and dimnames are taken from first argument if it is an
  array, otherwise the second.
These operators are members of the S4 Arith group generic,
  and so methods can be written for them individually as well as for the
  group generic (or the Ops group generic), with arguments
  c(e1, e2) (with e2 missing for a unary operator).
R is dependent on OS services (and they on FPUs) for floating-point
  arithmetic.  On all current R platforms IEC 60559 (also known as IEEE
  754) arithmetic is used, but some things in those standards are
  optional.  In particular, the support for denormal aka
  subnormal numbers
  (those outside the range given by .Machine) may differ
  between platforms and even between calculations on a single platform.
Another potential issue is signed zeroes: on IEC 60559 platforms there
  are two zeroes with internal representations differing by sign.  Where
  possible R treats them as the same, but for example direct output
  from C code often does not do so and may output -0.0 (and on
  Windows whether it does so or not depends on the version of Windows).
  One place in R where the difference might be seen is in division by
  zero: 1/x is Inf or -Inf depending on the sign of
  zero x.  Another place is
  identical(0, -0, num.eq = FALSE).
The unary and binary arithmetic operators are generic functions:
  methods can be written for them individually or via the
  Ops group generic function.  (See
  Ops for how dispatch is computed.)
If applied to arrays the result will be an array if this is sensible (for example it will not if the recycling rule has been invoked).
Logical vectors will be coerced to integer or numeric vectors,
  FALSE having value zero and TRUE having value one.
1 ^ y and y ^ 0 are 1, always.
  x ^ y should also give the proper limit result when
  either (numeric) argument is infinite (one of Inf or
  -Inf).
Objects such as arrays or time-series can be operated on this way provided they are conformable.
For double arguments, %% can be subject to catastrophic loss of
  accuracy if x is much larger than y, and a warning is
  given if this is detected.
%% and x %/% y can be used for non-integer y,
  e.g.1 %/% 0.2, but the results are subject to representation
  error and so may be platform-dependent.  Because the IEC 60559
  representation of 0.2 is a binary fraction slightly larger than
  0.2, the answer to 1 %/% 0.2 should be 4 but
  most platforms give 5.
Users are sometimes surprised by the value returned, for example why
  (-8)^(1/3) is NaN.  For double inputs, R makes
  use of IEC 60559 arithmetic on all platforms, together with the C
  system function pow for the ^ operator.  The relevant
  standards define the result in many corner cases.  In particular, the
  result in the example above is mandated by the C99 standard.  On many
  Unix-alike systems the command man pow gives details of the
  values in a large number of corner cases.
Arithmetic on type double in R is supposed to be done in ‘round to nearest, ties to even’ mode, but this does depend on the compiler and FPU being set up correctly.
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
D. Goldberg (1991). What Every Computer Scientist Should Know about Floating-Point Arithmetic. ACM Computing Surveys, 23(1), 5--48. 10.1145/103162.103163.
Postscript version available at http://www.validlab.com/goldberg/paper.ps. Extended PDF version at http://www.validlab.com/goldberg/paper.pdf.
For the IEC 60559 (aka IEEE 754) standard: https://www.iso.org/standard/57469.html and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_754.
sqrt for miscellaneous and Special for special
  mathematical functions.
Syntax for operator precedence.
%*% for matrix multiplication.
# NOT RUN {
x <- -1:12
x + 1
2 * x + 3
x %% 2 #-- is periodic
x %/% 5
x %% Inf # now is defined by limit (gave NaN in earlier versions of R)
# }
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