I have at various times tried the built-in (tools package) solution;
fairly complex hand-rolled stuff I did myself; and revdepcheck. I found
that revdepcheck handled installation of needed dependencies, including
caching packages where necessary, more easily. It felt like the 'tools'
machinery
Not sure why nobody dicusses the R internal check functionality, also
for reverse dependencies, from the tools package?
That is what CRAN uses for the reverse dependency checks.
Best,
Uwe Ligges
On 11.04.2018 23:14, J C Nash wrote:
Another workaround is to use
tlogl <- readLines(attr(cpkg.
Indeed these are useful for one of my present tasks. Thanks. JN
On 2018-04-11 03:10 PM, Georgi Boshnakov wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Not really an answer but I only recently discovered devtools::revdep(),
> which automates checking reverse dependencies.
>
> Georgi Boshnakov
>
>
>
>
> ___
Another workaround is to use
tlogl <- readLines(attr(cpkg.chk, "path"))
Possibly this may suggest a way to improve functionality.
JN
On 2018-04-11 03:24 PM, Henrik Bengtsson wrote:
> R CMD check, which is used internally runs checks in standalone
> background R processes. Output from these is
I got several responses to my query. Henrik's does suggest "why", but I
am rather unhappy that R has this weakness. (See below for a sort of
workaround for Linux users.)
In particular, note that the check_built() function DOES return an object,
but it does NOT print().
In fact, putting alldep <-
R CMD check, which is used internally runs checks in standalone
background R processes. Output from these is not capturable/sinkable
by the master R process. The gist of what's happening is:
> sink("output.log")
> system("echo hello") ## not sinked/captured
hello
> sink()
> readLines("output.lo
Hi,
Not really an answer but I only recently discovered devtools::revdep(), which
automates checking reverse dependencies.
Georgi Boshnakov
From: R-package-devel [r-package-devel-boun...@r-project.org] on behalf of J C
Nash [profjcn...@gmail.com]
Hi,
In trying to test that an upgrade to my optimx package does not break other
packages, I wanted to loop over a list of all such packages in alldep, with
nall the length of this list.
cat("Check the dependent packages\n")
for (ii in 1:nall){
cpkg <- alldep[ii]
dd <- "/home/john/temp/wrkopt/
I agree with Brian. This type of license is classified by the Free
Software Foundation as "lax" or "permissive" because it does not
prevent incorporation of the code into proprietary software.
Here is what Richard Stallman has to say: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/
license-compatibility.en.html
"[
Changing the path solved the problem. Thanks everyone!
Rampal
On 11-Apr-18 14:24, Marcelino de la Cruz Rot wrote:
Thank you for the hint, Henric.
I was also having the same NOTE.
Changing the path from \Rtools\mingw_32\bin to \Rtools\mingw_64\bin
solved it completely. Cheers, Marcelino
El
Thank you for the hint, Henric.
I was also having the same NOTE.
Changing the path from \Rtools\mingw_32\bin to \Rtools\mingw_64\bin
solved it completely. Cheers, Marcelino
El 11/04/2018 a las 11:56, Henric Winell escribió:
Den 2018-04-10 kl. 23:30, skrev Rampal Etienne:
Dear Thomas,
Yes,
On 10 April 2018 at 23:30, Rampal Etienne wrote:
| Yes, I followed all those suggestions but it did not fix the x64 notes.
| Indeed I am using Windows. I am going to try this on a Linux system.
You could consider the R Hub service at
https://builder.r-hub.io/
and/or via the CRAN package rh
Den 2018-04-10 kl. 23:30, skrev Rampal Etienne:
Dear Thomas,
Yes, I followed all those suggestions but it did not fix the x64 notes.
Indeed I am using Windows. I am going to try this on a Linux system.
On a 64-bit system you need to have 64-bit versions of the necessary
tools on the path, b
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