[1] 15.5
[1] 4.5
[1] 4
[1] "SPECIES"
[1] "species"
[1] 1.61
[1] 1.61
A built-in function is one that you don’t need to install and load a package to use. Some examples include:
abs() returns the absolute value of a number (e.g., abs(-2))round(), rounds a number (the first argument) to a given number of decimal places (the second argument) (e.g., round(12.1123, 2))sqrt(), takes the square root of a number (e.g., sqrt(4))tolower(), makes a string all lower case (e.g., tolower("HELLO"))toupper(), makes a string all upper case (e.g., toupper("hello"))Use these built-in functions to print the following items:
round() will default to using 0 if the second argument is not provided. Look at help(round) or ?round to see how this is indicated."species" in all capital letters."SPECIES" in all lower case letters.Optional Challenge: Do the same thing as task 6 (immediately above), but instead of creating the intermediate variable, perform both the square root and the round on a single line by putting the sqrt() call inside the round() call.
[1] 15.5
[1] 4.5
[1] 4
[1] "SPECIES"
[1] "species"
[1] 1.61
[1] 1.61