checkmate (version 1.7.2)

checkCount: Check if an argument is a count

Description

A count is defined as non-negative integerish value.

Usage

checkCount(x, na.ok = FALSE, positive = FALSE,
  tol = sqrt(.Machine$double.eps))

assertCount(x, na.ok = FALSE, positive = FALSE, tol = sqrt(.Machine$double.eps), add = NULL, .var.name)

assert_count(x, na.ok = FALSE, positive = FALSE, tol = sqrt(.Machine$double.eps), add = NULL, .var.name)

testCount(x, na.ok = FALSE, positive = FALSE, tol = sqrt(.Machine$double.eps))

test_count(x, na.ok = FALSE, positive = FALSE, tol = sqrt(.Machine$double.eps))

expect_count(x, na.ok = FALSE, positive = FALSE, tol = sqrt(.Machine$double.eps), info = NULL, label = NULL)

Arguments

x
[any] Object to check.
na.ok
[logical(1)] Are missing values allowed? Default is FALSE.
positive
[logical(1)] Must x be positive (>= 1)? Default is FALSE, allowing 0.
tol
[double(1)] Numerical tolerance used to check whether a double or complex can be converted. Default is sqrt(.Machine$double.eps).
add
[AssertCollection] Collection to store assertions. See AssertCollection.
.var.name
[character(1)] Name for x. Defaults to a heuristic to determine the name using deparse and substitute.
info
[character(1)] Extra information to be included in the message for the testthat reporter. See expect_that.
label
[character(1)] Same as .var.name, but passed down to expect_that.

Value

  • Depending on the function prefix: If the check is successful, the functions return TRUE. If the check is not successful, assertCount/assert_count throws an error message, testCount/test_count returns FALSE, and checkCount returns a string with the error message. The function expect_count always returns an expectation.

Details

This function does not distinguish between NA, NA_integer_, NA_real_, NA_complex_ NA_character_ and NaN.

See Also

Other scalars: checkFlag, checkInt, checkNumber, checkScalarNA, checkScalar, checkString

Examples

Run this code
testCount(1)
testCount(-1)

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