% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/addLR.R \name{addLR} \alias{addLR} \title{Additive logratio coordinates} \usage{ addLR(x, ivar = ncol(x), base = exp(1)) } \arguments{ \item{x}{D-part compositional data} \item{ivar}{Rationing part} \item{base}{a positive or complex number: the base with respect to which logarithms are computed. Defaults to \code{exp(1)}.} } \value{ A list of class \dQuote{alr} which includes the following content: \item{x.alr}{the resulting coordinates} \item{varx}{the rationing variable} \item{ivar}{the index of the rationing variable, indicating the column number of the rationing variable in the data matrix \emph{x}} \item{cnames}{the column names of \emph{x}} The additional information such as \emph{cnames} or \emph{ivar} is useful when an inverse mapping is applied on the \sQuote{same} data set. } \description{ The additive logratio coordinates map D-part compositional data from the simplex into a (D-1)-dimensional real space. } \details{ The compositional parts are divided by the rationing part before the logarithm is taken. } \examples{ data(arcticLake) x <- arcticLake x.alr <- addLR(x, 2) y <- addLRinv(x.alr) ## This exactly fulfills: addLRinv(addLR(x, 3)) data(expenditures) x <- expenditures y <- addLRinv(addLR(x, 5)) head(x) head(y) ## --> absolute values are preserved as well. ## preserve only the ratios: addLRinv(x.alr, ivar=2, useClassInfo=FALSE) } \references{ Aitchison, J. (1986) \emph{The Statistical Analysis of Compositional Data} Monographs on Statistics and Applied Probability. Chapman \& Hall Ltd., London (UK). 416p. } \seealso{ \code{\link{addLRinv}}, \code{\link{pivotCoord}} } \author{ Matthias Templ } \keyword{manip}