Thx for the information. I read it, but I wasn't sure what was going on inside. Is there a way to close a connection without destroying it? Guess not, but you never know...
Cheers Joris On Fri, Apr 8, 2011 at 5:09 PM, Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.dun...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 08/04/2011 10:56 AM, Joris Meys wrote: >> >> Dear all, >> >> I do not completely understand following behaviour : >> >> > con<- file("test.txt") >> > isOpen(con) >> [1] FALSE >> > open(con) >> > isOpen(con) >> [1] TRUE >> > close(con) >> > isOpen(con) >> Error in isOpen(con) : invalid connection >> > str(con) >> Classes 'file', 'connection' atomic [1:1] 3 >> ..- attr(*, "conn_id")=<externalptr> >> >> Why do I get an error, indicating an invalid connection, after I >> closed a connection? Is this to be expected? > > Quoting ?close: " ‘close’ closes and destroys a connection. " In the current > implementation, connections are a finite resource, and you need to be able > to get rid of them when you are done. close(con) is the way to do that. If > you want to re-open it, you need to remember the filename (or extract it > before calling close()), and issue another call to file(). > > Duncan Murdoch > -- Joris Meys Statistical consultant Ghent University Faculty of Bioscience Engineering Department of Applied mathematics, biometrics and process control tel : +32 9 264 59 87 joris.m...@ugent.be ------------------------------- Disclaimer : http://helpdesk.ugent.be/e-maildisclaimer.php ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel