Dear Duncan,
Thanks for these precisions.
In fact, i am planning to make an R package which will help users to
conduct simulation studies for hypothesis tests.
The results will consist in a LaTeX table containing the power of
different test statistics for different n values and alternative
distributions to H0.
This kind of work necessitate heavy computations so it is better done in
C or Fortran.
The (advanced) user could add to the source tree of the package its own
test statistics (each statistic in one separate statj.cpp file) and its
own alternative distributions under H1 (each law in one separate lawj.cpp).
Then an R wrapper will call all of this.
The package is already pretty usable for me, but the (advanced) users
will need to compile it each time they add some new distribution and/or
test statistic.
This is not that difficult under Linux but more difficult under other
OSes that lack standard compiler tools.
If you have some ideas to improve the way i planned to do it, please let
me know.
I could send you what i have already done.
Best,
Pierre
Duncan Murdoch a écrit :
Barry Rowlingson wrote:
2008/8/11 Lafaye de Micheaux Pierre
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Thank you Barry,
In fact, these are only C files (not C++) and i use the extern "C"
directive.
I would prefer not to rename the files because many of these files
serve
also in other projects where they should have the .cpp extension
I would also not like to merge all the *.cpp files in one unique file
because many users have to provide their own C file.
So i would really like to use some kind of configure or Make script,
that
should be put in the source directory tree of the R package.
If the only function of these files within the R package in question
is to be included into the other C++ files, then perhaps you could put
them in another directory and include them from there:
#include "../extrasrc/foo.cpp"
I'm not sure if the forward slash will work in non-Unix OSs, but it
might...
Yes, it's fine on all the R platforms.
One reason to include a .cpp file is when it's code written by someone
else. For example, the rgl package makes use of the ftgl library, and
includes it in source form, with a bunch of #include's from a
subdirectory to pick out the needed parts. This way no changes to ftgl
need to be made to suit rgl.
Duncan Murdoch
There may be some make-magic to tell make to exclude some files from
its implicit build rules, but I don't know what it is.
Barry
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