Return a string representing an earth
expression
(summary.earth
calls this function internally to
display the terms of the earth
model).
# S3 method for earth
format(x = stop("no 'x' argument"),
style = "h", decomp = "anova", digits = getOption("digits"),
use.names = TRUE, colon.char = ":", ...)
A character representation of the earth
model.
If there are multiple responses, format.earth
will return multiple strings.
If there are embedded GLM model(s), the strings for the GLM model(s)
come after the strings for the standard earth
model(s).
An earth
object.
This is the only required argument.
Formatting style. One of
"h"
(default) more compact
"pmax"
for those who prefer it
"max"
is the same as "pmax"
but prints max
rather than pmax
"C"
C style expression with zero based indexing
"bf"
basis function format
One of
"anova"
(default) order the terms using the "anova decomposition",
i.e., in increasing order of interaction
"none"
order the terms as created during the earth forward pass.
Number of significant digits.
The default is getOption(digits)
.
One of
TRUE
(default), use variable names if available.
FALSE
use names of the form x[,1]
.
Change colons in the returned string to colon.char.
Default is ":" (no change).
Specifying colon.char="*"
can be useful in some contexts to change
names of the form x1:x2
to x1*x2
.
Unused, but provided for generic/method consistency.
summary.earth
,
pmax
,
earth.mod <- earth(Volume ~ ., data = trees)
cat(format(earth.mod))
# yields:
# 29.0
# - 3.42 * h(14.2-Girth)
# + 6.23 * h(Girth-14.2)
# + 0.581 * h(Height-75)
cat(format(earth.mod, style="pmax"))
# yields:
# 29.0
# - 3.42 * pmax(0, 14.2 - Girth)
# + 6.23 * pmax(0, Girth - 14.2)
# + 0.581 * pmax(0, Height - 75)
cat(format(earth.mod, style="C"))
# yields (note zero based indexing):
# 29.0
# - 3.42 * max(0, 14.2 - x[0])
# + 6.23 * max(0, x[0] - 14.2)
# + 0.581 * max(0, x[1] - 75)
cat(format(earth.mod, style="bf"))
# yields:
# 29.0
# - 3.42 * bf1
# + 6.23 * bf2
# + 0.581 * bf3
#
# bf1 h(14.2-Girth)
# bf2 h(Girth-14.2)
# bf3 h(Height-75)
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