I was wondering why the decision was made long ago to never implement multi-line comments in R. I feel there are several argument to be made for why the R language should have multi-line comments.
1. Many programming languages (including some which are commonly used for statistics, such as python, matlab and SAS) have this feature. 2. Convenience - some editors may not support commenting out a selected region of code. This would provide a quick way of commenting and uncommenting code which could be useful when debugging. Also, if you have to type a lot of explanatory comments at the top of a code file, it can be frustrating to have to type "#" at the start of every line in some editors. I can also think of a few reasons why R doesn't have multi-line comments or hasn't implemented them so far: 1. Introducing a new multi-line comment delimiter, such as /* */ could destroy existing code. 2. S didn't implement this feature (as far as I am aware), and R is heavily influenced by the design of the S language. Also, perhaps the community doesn't want this feature, and R is a community driven project. 3. Perhaps this would be difficult to implement depending on the way that R parses source files. Is it even possible to make /* */ or a different delimiter do something like ``if(FALSE) { }``? Nathan [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel