I was learning from swirl about t-tests and this came up:
t.test(allMPG, mu = 12.0, alternative = "two.sided")
Why do we put quotes on "two.sided" and not on 12.0?
Is there a general rule on how to understand when to use quotes and when not?
Wow. A newbie wonders why some things dont need quotes and a 170k rep user answers by throwing around "instances of language objects" and "non-standard evaluation"....
@Spacedman could be better organized, but he raises some useful pitfalls/exceptions like column names (you start out expecting them to not need quotes, but then find out they do, but then find out they don't in certain functions and when using certain packages)
that part about linefeeds and parse trees is over my head, though
@Spacedman i'm not saying your answer should be like his just that the latter isn't necessarily useless, especially if cleaned up some. heh, first i've heard of gram.y