% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/print.gensvm.R \name{print.gensvm} \alias{print.gensvm} \title{Print the fitted GenSVM model} \usage{ \method{print}{gensvm}(x, ...) } \arguments{ \item{x}{A \code{gensvm} object to print} \item{\dots}{further arguments are ignored} } \value{ returns the object passed as input. This can be useful for chaining operations on a fit object. } \description{ Prints a short description of the fitted GenSVM model } \examples{ x <- iris[, -5] y <- iris[, 5] # fit and print the model fit <- gensvm(x, y) print(fit) # (advanced) use the fact that print returns the fitted model fit <- gensvm(x, y) predict(print(fit), x) } \references{ Van den Burg, G.J.J. and Groenen, P.J.F. (2016). \emph{GenSVM: A Generalized Multiclass Support Vector Machine}, Journal of Machine Learning Research, 17(225):1--42. URL \url{https://jmlr.org/papers/v17/14-526.html}. } \seealso{ \code{\link{gensvm}}, \code{\link{predict.gensvm}}, \code{\link{plot.gensvm}}, \code{\link{gensvm-package}} } \author{ Gerrit J.J. van den Burg, Patrick J.F. Groenen \cr Maintainer: Gerrit J.J. van den Burg }