% File src/library/stats/man/anova.Rd % Part of the R package, https://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2013 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{anova} \alias{anova} %\alias{print.anova} \concept{regression} \title{ANOVA Tables} \usage{ anova(object, \dots) } \description{ Compute analysis of variance (or deviance) tables for one or more fitted model objects. } \arguments{ \item{object}{an object containing the results returned by a model fitting function (e.g., \code{lm} or \code{glm}).} \item{\dots}{additional objects of the same type.} } \value{ This (generic) function returns an object of class \code{anova}. These objects represent analysis-of-variance and analysis-of-deviance tables. When given a single argument it produces a table which tests whether the model terms are significant. When given a sequence of objects, \code{anova} tests the models against one another in the order specified. The print method for \code{anova} objects prints tables in a \sQuote{pretty} form. } \section{Warning}{ The comparison between two or more models will only be valid if they are fitted to the same dataset. This may be a problem if there are missing values and \R's default of \code{na.action = na.omit} is used. } \references{ Chambers, J. M. and Hastie, T. J. (1992) \emph{Statistical Models in S}, Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole. } \seealso{ \code{\link{coefficients}}, \code{\link{effects}}, \code{\link{fitted.values}}, \code{\link{residuals}}, \code{\link{summary}}, \code{\link{drop1}}, \code{\link{add1}}. } \keyword{regression} \keyword{models}