Summary: Interacting with R
Many people replied. Thank you all very very much for the input. The sheer volume provided me with strong encouragement to make a leap into a programming environment. Summary: 1. Nearly everyone suggested that I bite the bullet, get Emacs and ESS. 2. Most people also suggested using R-WinEdt with WinEdt (only on windows). 3. Use the Display file menu item in Rgui to run parts of a program. This is more convenient than ESS (and just one key stroke), although you can't edit in an R pager. (Thanks to BD Ripley). Henry Stevens ----- Original Message ----- From: Uwe Ligges To: Martin Henry H. Stevens Cc: r-help at hypatia.math.ethz.ch Sent: Friday, April 20, 2001 11:05 AM Subject: Re: [R] Interacting with R
> "Martin Henry H. Stevens" wrote:
> > Dear R folks, > > (Running Windows 98, Pentium II, 128 Mb RAM) > > I have been using Splus 2000 for about 1.5 years, and have recently > begun using R. I love the Open Source philosophy! I may be switching > to to Linux soon. > > My question: > > How do people most often interact with R? > > In Splus 2000, I used "Script" windows to write functions. "Script" > windows were great because: > > 1. they are simple to start and save, > 2. I could highlight segments of code and run segments, > 3. They have the nifty feature of highlighting each opening > parenthesis as you type the corresponding closing parenthesis, > 4. They were in Splus itself. > > Where would I look for a description of how folks interact with R to > perform comparable tasks? Is there an introduction or appendix > somewhere that walks a user through daily use that is a little beyond > the simple command line stuff in V&R 3rd edition or "R for beginners" > (E. Paradis 2000)? I thought I checked the standard documentation, but > may have missed the relevent part. > > I have been writing functions and scripts in Word, saving as text > (with the .txt suffix I cannot get rid of) and then using "source()" > to implement functions. This is okay, but seems a little clumsy. There is ESS for the Emacs, which is very nice for interacting with R. If you have WinEdt available, you might also want to have a look at R-WinEdt (only on windows). Both abvailable at http://CRAN.R-Project.org/other-software.html Uwe Ligges -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-help/attachments/20010420/392bbc90/attachment.html