Excuse me if this is inappropriate content for this list, but I thought it might be the best place -- and the best audience -- to ask about a design decision for the R language.
Programs or analyses written in R typically use library() to pull in functions from non-core packages. This differs markedly from most languages*, which usually offer some way to selectively import symbols. For example, in Python you'd see "from random import randint", and so on. Within R packages, the NAMESPACE file provides this exact functionality with the importFrom() directive, but the R language itself does not expose this as a function for regular users. I know that R did not have namespaces for some of its early existence, but I'm curious as to why the language never acquired an import() or importFrom() replacement for library() when it did get them. Was it purely for compatibility with S and earlier R versions? Or was there a principled difference of opinion on how R code should be written at stake? Any insight from those of you familiar with R's history would be deeply appreciated. Regards, Aaron ps. I am aware of the very clever "import" package, which provides exactly this feature -- I am more wondering why such an approach was never adopted by the language itself. * Most languages with real modules/namespaces, I mean. [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel