A utility to compare integer64 objects 'x' and 'y' testing for ‘near equality’, see all.equal.
# S3 method for integer64
all.equal(
target
, current
, tolerance = sqrt(.Machine$double.eps)
, scale = NULL
, countEQ = FALSE
, formatFUN = function(err, what) format(err)
, ...
, check.attributes = TRUE
)Either ‘TRUE’ (‘NULL’ for ‘attr.all.equal’) or a vector of ‘mode’ ‘"character"’ describing the differences between ‘target’ and ‘current’.
a vector of 'integer64' or an object that can be coerced with as.integer64
a vector of 'integer64' or an object that can be coerced with as.integer64
numeric \(\ge\) 0. Differences smaller than
tolerance are not reported. The default value is close to
1.5e-8.
NULL or numeric > 0, typically of length 1 or
length(target). See ‘Details’.
logical indicating if the target == current
cases should be counted when computing the mean (absolute or
relative) differences. The default, FALSE may seem
misleading in cases where target and current only
differ in a few places; see the extensive example.
a function of two arguments,
err, the relative, absolute or scaled error, and
what, a character string indicating the kind of error;
maybe used, e.g., to format relative and absolute errors differently.
further arguments are ignored
logical indicating if the
attributes of target and current
(other than the names) should be compared.
Leonardo Silvestri (for package nanotime)
In all.equal.numeric the type integer is treated as a proper subset of double
i.e. does not complain about comparing integer with double.
Following this logic all.equal.integer64 treats integer as a proper subset of integer64
and does not complain about comparing integer with integer64. double also compares without warning
as long as the values are within lim.integer64, if double are bigger all.equal.integer64
complains about the all.equal.integer64 overflow warning. For further details see all.equal.
all.equal(as.integer64(1:10), as.integer64(0:9))
all.equal(as.integer64(1:10), as.integer(1:10))
all.equal(as.integer64(1:10), as.double(1:10))
all.equal(as.integer64(1), as.double(1e300))
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