% File src/library/stats/man/factor.scope.Rd % Part of the R package, https://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2007 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{factor.scope} \title{Compute Allowed Changes in Adding to or Dropping from a Formula} \usage{ add.scope(terms1, terms2) drop.scope(terms1, terms2) factor.scope(factor, scope) } \alias{add.scope} \alias{drop.scope} \alias{factor.scope} \arguments{ \item{terms1}{the terms or formula for the base model.} \item{terms2}{the terms or formula for the upper (\code{add.scope}) or lower (\code{drop.scope}) scope. If missing for \code{drop.scope} it is taken to be the null formula, so all terms (except any intercept) are candidates to be dropped.} \item{factor}{the \code{"factor"} attribute of the terms of the base object.} \item{scope}{a list with one or both components \code{drop} and \code{add} giving the \code{"factor"} attribute of the lower and upper scopes respectively.} } \description{ \code{add.scope} and \code{drop.scope} compute those terms that can be individually added to or dropped from a model while respecting the hierarchy of terms. } \details{ \code{factor.scope} is not intended to be called directly by users. } \value{ For \code{add.scope} and \code{drop.scope} a character vector of terms labels. For \code{factor.scope}, a list with components \code{drop} and \code{add}, character vectors of terms labels. } \seealso{\code{\link{add1}}, \code{\link{drop1}}, \code{\link{aov}}, \code{\link{lm}}} \examples{ add.scope( ~ a + b + c + a:b, ~ (a + b + c)^3) # [1] "a:c" "b:c" drop.scope( ~ a + b + c + a:b) # [1] "c" "a:b" } \keyword{models}