\item{col_mo}{column name of the IDs of the microorganisms (see \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}}), defaults to the first column of class \code{\link{mo}}. Values will be coerced using \code{\link[=as.mo]{as.mo()}}.}
\item{language}{language of the returned text, defaults to system language (see \code{\link[=get_AMR_locale]{get_AMR_locale()}}) and can also be set with \code{getOption("AMR_locale")}. Use \code{language = NULL} or \code{language = ""} to prevent translation.}
\item{minimum}{the minimum allowed number of available (tested) isolates. Any isolate count lower than \code{minimum} will return \code{NA} with a warning. The default number of \code{30} isolates is advised by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) as best practice, see \emph{Source}.}
\item{combine_SI}{a \link{logical} to indicate whether values S and I should be summed, so resistance will be based on only R, defaults to \code{TRUE}}
\item{remove_intrinsic_resistant}{\link{logical} to indicate that rows and columns with 100\% resistance for all tested antimicrobials must be removed from the table}
The function \code{\link[=bug_drug_combinations]{bug_drug_combinations()}} returns a \link{data.frame} with columns "mo", "ab", "S", "I", "R" and "total".
Determine antimicrobial resistance (AMR) of all bug-drug combinations in your data set where at least 30 (default) isolates are available per species. Use \code{\link[=format]{format()}} on the result to prettify it to a publishable/printable format, see \emph{Examples}.
The function \code{\link[=format]{format()}} calculates the resistance per bug-drug combination. Use \code{combine_SI = TRUE} (default) to test R vs. S+I and \code{combine_SI = FALSE} to test R+I vs. S.