[R] in cor.test, difference between exact=FALSE and exact=NULL

Peter Dalgaard P.Dalgaard at biostat.ku.dk
Fri Aug 31 17:06:11 CEST 2007


Andrew Yee wrote:
> Pardon my ignorance, but is there a difference in cor.test between
> exact=FALSE and exact=NULL when method=spearman?
>
> Take for example:
>
> x<-c(1,2,2,3,4,5)
> y<-c(1,2,2,10,11,12)
> cor.test(x,y, method="spearman", exact=NULL)
>
> This gives an error message,
> Warning message:  Cannot compute exact p-values with ties in:
> cor.test.default(x, y, method = "spearman", exact = NULL)
>
> However, when exact is changed to FALSE, this seems to run okay.
>
> cor.test(x,y, method="spearman", exact=FALSE)
>
> Question:  should this be exact = FALSE in the documentation and/or the code?
>
>   
No. The default is indeed NULL.

This implies that calculation of exact p-values will be attempted, and
when there are ties you get a warning (NB: not error) message.  Setting
exact=FALSE, no attempt is made and no warning is given.
> Thanks,
> Andrew
> MGH Cancer Center
>
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>   


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  c/ /'_ --- Dept. of Biostatistics     PO Box 2099, 1014 Cph. K
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