
Last chance! 50% off unlimited learning
Sale ends in
It acts similiarly to Excel's OR function. Logical operator where if at least only one logical is true it returns true.
OR(
logical1,
logical2 = FALSE,
logical3 = FALSE,
logical4 = FALSE,
logical5 = FALSE,
logical6 = FALSE,
logical7 = FALSE,
logical8 = FALSE,
logical9 = FALSE,
logical10 = FALSE,
logical11 = FALSE,
logical12 = FALSE,
logical13 = FALSE,
logical14 = FALSE,
logical15 = FALSE,
logical16 = FALSE,
logical17 = FALSE,
logical18 = FALSE,
logical19 = FALSE,
logical20 = FALSE,
logical21 = FALSE,
logical22 = FALSE,
logical23 = FALSE,
logical24 = FALSE,
logical25 = FALSE,
logical26 = FALSE,
logical27 = FALSE,
logical28 = FALSE,
logical29 = FALSE,
logical30 = FALSE,
logical31 = FALSE,
logical32 = FALSE
)
Give the function a logical argument. The one that returns either TRUE or FALSE.
In this example either if species is virginica or sepal length is more than 6 then it returns true. Function will always return logical class.
# NOT RUN {
OR(iris$Species == "virginica",iris$Sepal.Length > 6)
# }
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab