The R programming language uses indices that start from 1, but sometimes it might be handy to be able to index from zero, as is more typical in mathematical notation and some other programming languages like C and Python.
Install the development version of index0 from GitHub with:
# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("Selbosh/index0")This R package index0 provides the
index0 class. Subsetting and operations using
[ will index from zero rather than one. To return to normal
behaviour, use as.index1 or just remove the
index0 class from your object.
library(index0)
letters0 <- as.index0(letters)
numbers0 <- as.index0(c(2, 3, 4, 5, 6))What is the zeroth letter of the alphabet? What is the zeroth number in our set?
letters0[0]
#> [1] "a"
#> indexed from 0
numbers0[0]
#> [1] 2
#> indexed from 0What are the first, second and fourth letters?
letters0[c(1, 2, 4)]
#> [1] "b" "c" "e"
#> indexed from 0Replace the first and third numbers with NA:
numbers0[c(1, 3)] <- NA
numbers0
#> [1] 2 NA 4 NA 6
#> indexed from 0