## S3 method for class 'openair':
head(x, subset = "all", ...)
## S3 method for class 'openair':
names(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'openair':
plot(x, subset = "all", silent = TRUE, ...)
## S3 method for class 'openair':
print(x, silent = FALSE, plot = TRUE, ...)
## S3 method for class 'openair':
results(object, subset = "all", silent = FALSE, ...)
## S3 method for class 'openair':
summary(object, subset = "all", ...)
## S3 method for class 'openair':
tail(x, subset = "all", ...)print, plot, summary, etc, 
  must be an output from an openair function of class ``openair''. NOTE: Object naming 
  (i.e., x or object) is determined in parex (or object) is a multiple component 
  openair output, the subset of x (or object) to use. Default "all" 
  or alternative NULL extract and use all available subsets.   
print, plot graphical components of 
  x using plot, default TRUE.plot(output) reproduces the original plot. If the original plot contains multiple components, 
  the option subset can be used to produce subplots individually.  
  print(output) provides a (to console) description of the output and reproduces the associated 
  plot. As with plot, if the output has multiple components, subset can be used to 
  access individual subsets of data and associated plots.
  results(output) extracts the data used to generate the openair   
  plot. If the output contains more than one data frame, these are returned as a list 
  of data frames. Alternatively, in such cases the option subset can be used 
  to extract one or more data frame from the supplied object.
  NOTE: results is not strictly a generic function. The term and mode of operation 
  is not widely used elsewhere in R. It is, however, convenient to consider it 
  alongside the openair.generics because it operates on openair objects and because 
  it has been implemented as method in a similar fashion to the generic terms. The 
  default form of results (that used if object is not of ``openair'' 
  class) currently returns object without modification.
  summary(output) summarises data in the output. If the output contains 
  more than one data frame, each data frame is summarised individually and results returned 
  as a list of summaries. As above the option subset can be used to extract one 
  or more data frame to be summarised. See summary for details of 
  individual data frame handling. 
  head(output) and tail(output) operate like summary but return the 
  first or last part of available/requested output data frames, respectively, in a similar 
  fashion to conventional R functions head and tail. See head 
  or tail for details of individual data frame handling.#make object
ans <- trendLevel(mydata, pollutant = "nox")
#use generics
print(ans)
#recover data
myresults <- results(ans)
head(myresults)Run the code above in your browser using DataLab