> A side question, which I do not know the answer to, is how users get > themselves into this state.
I've fallen over this a few times. It happens when you have multiple R sessions running, and R tries to update Rcpp while it is loaded in the other session. For example, I'm working on one project, then I open another copy of R to work on a different project. Because I have update.packages in my Rprofile, R occasionally tries to update Rcpp. If that is loaded in the first session, then a clean uninstall doesn't happen (the directory and the dll are left). Since the directory is still there, update.packages thinks that the package exists, and I'm left with a mangled copy of Rcpp that I need to manually remove. On 24 October 2016 at 20:51, Kevin Ushey <kevinus...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi R-devel, > > One of the more common issues that new R users see, and become stumped > by, is error messages during package load of the form: > >> library(ggplot2) > Error in loadNamespace(j <- i[[1L]], c(lib.loc, .libPaths()), > versionCheck = vI[[j]]) : > there is no package called 'Rcpp' > Error: package or namespace load failed for 'ggplot2' > > Typically, error messages of this form are caused simply by one or > more dependent packages (in this case, 'Rcpp') not being installed or > available on the current library paths. (A side question, which I do > not know the answer to, is how users get themselves into this state.) > > I believe it would be helpful for new users if the error message > reported here was a bit more direct, e.g. > >> library(ggplot2) > Error: 'ggplot2' depends on package 'Rcpp', but 'Rcpp' is not installed > consider installing 'Rcpp' with install.packages("Rcpp") > > In other words, it might be helpful to avoid printing the > 'loadNamespace()' call on error (since it's mostly just scary / > uninformative), and check up-front that the package is installed > before attempting to call 'loadNamespace()'. I'm sure a number of > novice users will still just throw their hands up in the air and say > "I don't know what to do", but I think this would help steer a number > of users in the right direction. > > (The prescription to suggest installing a package from CRAN if > available might be a step too far, but I think making it more clear > that the error is due to a missing dependent package would help.) > > Any thoughts? > Kevin > > ______________________________________________ > R-devel@r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel -- Regards, Richie Learning R 4dpiecharts.com ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel