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.Internal

G'day Kevin,

On Mon, 23 Mar 2009 18:48:16 -0400
<rkevinburton at charter.net> wrote:

            
Sorry for not being clear enough.  Yes, the article tells you how to
find out that do_fmin is (eventually) called when you call optimize on
the command line.  I thought that this was one of your questions.
As far as I know, .Internal has the same interface as .External.  So a
study of "Writing R Extensions" should give insight regarding this
step.  In particular Chapter 5 (System and foreign language interfaces)
-> Section 5.10 (Interface functions .Call and .External) -> Section
5.10.2 (Calling .External).

Essentially, all arguments to a C function called via .Internal
or .External are passed as a single SEXP; this allows to pass an
unlimited number of arguments to a C function as all other interfaces
to native routines (.C, .Call, .Fortran) have some limit, albeit a
rather generous one, on the number of arguments that can be passed to
the native routine.

I believe you can think of that single SEXP as a list containing the
individual arguments.  Accessing those arguments one by one involves
macros with names like CDR, CAR, CADR, CADDR, CADDDR, CAD4R and so
forth.  As I understand it, if you are fluent in Lisp (Scheme?) and how
components of a list are referred to in that language, then you have no
problems with understanding the names of those macros.  Since I never
became comfortable with those languages, I restrict myself to .C
and .Call; YMMV.

HTH.

Cheers,

	Berwin

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