Uwe,

I think Ulrike is making a different suggestion, that install.packages() should 
fetch the binary that has been built for the current version of R.

This would be a bad idea for a different reason -- in general it is not 
possible to be sure that the package works with an older version of R. The R 
version dependency isn't enough for two reasons. The first is that the author 
may well not know that the package fails with an older version of R and so 
would not have listed a dependency. The second is that the binary versions may 
be incompatible even if the source versions are compatible.

You can always download a binary package from CRAN in a browser and use the 
option to install from a local zip file. Or, as Uwe suggests, get a new version 
of R.

What I think might be useful if it's not too difficult is a warning from 
install.packages() that a newer version of the package you were installing is 
available for the current version of R.

     -thomas


On Fri, 24 Jul 2009 lig...@statistik.tu-dortmund.de wrote:

Ulrike,

if you install from source, you always get the most recent version of
the package given it does not depend on a newer version of R.

If you want a binary package, you also get the newest version - that was
newest at the time we stopped building binaries for that version of R.
We (or better I if we only talk about Windows, but similar for all other
platforms) cannot build for each R version any more. In that case we'd
have to build even 11 binary versions for Windows just for the R-2.x.y
series now. Binary repositories are fixed at some time (for Windows once
the first patchlevel release of the next R version is out, e.g. at the
time of the R-2.9.1 release the binary builds for R-2.8.x had been stopped).

So please upgrade your version of R or compile yourself from sources for
the R version you need the particular package for.

Best wishes,
Uwe Ligges





groemp...@bht-berlin.de wrote:
Full_Name: Ulrike Groemping
Version: 2.9.0 (and older)
OS: Windows
Submission from: (NULL) (84.190.173.190)


When using an older version of R, packages are not found although they are
available for newer versions of R and do work when installed with the old
version. For example, installing DoE.base on R 2.8.1 installs version 0.2, while
CRAN is at version 0.4-1 currently. It would be nice if the install process
would per default look for the newest version of the package and install this
one if its R-version request allows this. (I recently found a help list entry by
Uwe Ligges that explains how to manually install from a repository for a newer
CRAN version, but I did not bookmark it and cannot find it any more. The
documentation does not enlighten me there.)

Regards, Ulrike

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Thomas Lumley                   Assoc. Professor, Biostatistics
tlum...@u.washington.edu        University of Washington, Seattle

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