% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/abname.R \name{abname} \alias{abname} \title{Name of an antibiotic} \source{ \code{\link{antibiotics}} } \usage{ abname(abcode, from = c("guess", "atc", "certe", "umcg"), to = "official", textbetween = " + ", tolower = FALSE) } \arguments{ \item{abcode}{a code or name, like \code{"AMOX"}, \code{"AMCL"} or \code{"J01CA04"}} \item{from, to}{type to transform from and to. See \code{\link{antibiotics}} for its column names. WIth \code{from = "guess"} the from will be guessed from \code{"atc"}, \code{"certe"} and \code{"umcg"}. When using \code{to = "atc"}, the ATC code will be searched using \code{\link{as.atc}}.} \item{textbetween}{text to put between multiple returned texts} \item{tolower}{return output as lower case with function \code{\link{tolower}}.} } \description{ Convert antibiotic codes to a (trivial) antibiotic name or ATC code, or vice versa. This uses the data from \code{\link{antibiotics}}. } \details{ \strong{The \code{\link{ab_property}} functions are faster and more concise}, but do not support concatenated strings, like \code{abname("AMCL+GENT"}. } \examples{ abname("AMCL") # "Amoxicillin and beta-lactamase inhibitor" # It is quite flexible at default (having `from = "guess"`) abname(c("amox", "J01CA04", "Trimox", "dispermox", "Amoxil")) # "Amoxicillin" "Amoxicillin" "Amoxicillin" "Amoxicillin" "Amoxicillin" # Multiple antibiotics can be combined with "+". # The second antibiotic will be set to lower case when `tolower` was not set: abname("AMCL+GENT", textbetween = "/") # "amoxicillin and enzyme inhibitor/gentamicin" abname(c("AMCL", "GENT")) # "Amoxicillin and beta-lactamase inhibitor" "Gentamicin" abname("AMCL", to = "trivial_nl") # "Amoxicilline/clavulaanzuur" abname("AMCL", to = "atc") # "J01CR02" # specific codes for University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG): abname("J01CR02", from = "atc", to = "umcg") # "AMCL" # specific codes for Certe: abname("J01CR02", from = "atc", to = "certe") # "amcl" } \keyword{ab} \keyword{antibiotics}