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What is the difference between paste/paste0 and str_c?

Tags:

r

stringr

I don't seem to see a difference between paste/paste0 and str_c for combining a single vector into a single string, multiple strings into one string, or multiple vectors into a single string.

While I was writing the question I found this: https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/stringr/versions/1.3.1/topics/str_c. The community example from [email protected] says the difference is is that str_c treats blanks as blanks (not as NAs) and recycles more appropriately. Any other differences?

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Ben G Avatar asked Jun 12 '18 13:06

Ben G


1 Answers

paste0(..., collapse = NULL)is a wrapper for paste(..., sep = "", collapse = NULL), which means there is no separator. In other words, with paste0() you can not apply some sort of separator, while you do have that option with paste(), whereas a single space is the default.

str_c(..., sep = "", collapse = NULL) is equivalent to paste(), which means you do have the option to customize your desired separator. The difference is for str_c() the default is no separator, so it acts just like paste0() as a default.

Paste() and paste0() are both functions from the base package, whereas str_c() comes from the stringr package.

I did not test/microbenchmark it, but from my experience I do agree to Ryan str_c() is generally faster.

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Lennyy Avatar answered Sep 18 '22 12:09

Lennyy