Message-ID: <4989A41F-60CE-42BF-B3B8-E2E2D92DAFC9@gmail.com>
Date: 2011-01-27T10:25:15Z
From: Christophe Dutang
Subject: R editor for Mac
In-Reply-To: <53302E02-791A-46F2-A3C2-0D6737FA3C14@ed.ac.uk>
One can also use aquamacs with ESS: http://aquamacs.org/features.shtml, but I find it quite slow compared to the built-in editor.
--
Christophe Dutang
Ph.D. student at ISFA, Lyon, France
website: http://dutangc.free.fr
Le 27 janv. 2011 ? 11:10, Timothy Bates a ?crit :
> I agree the built-in editor works well.
>
> I?ll add that I work entirely in Textmate.
>
> In addition to the built-in editor?s features such as command execution, it offers
>
> Flexible execution (run in R.app; run in a daemon, return to clipboard, return to this document, return as tool-tip etc
> Snippets (your own tab-completable smart-typing function insertion)
> Commands: convert a list of numbers to an Rvector or matrix; drop-down menu for par() parameters (cmd-;)? the list is endless and incredibly helpful
> Code-folding (so you can collapse long function etc.
> Wide choice of syntax highlighting schemes
>
>
>
> On 26 Jan 2011, at 8:27 PM, Andrew Beckerman wrote:
>
>> Kristina
>>
>> The mac installation of R comes with a brilliant script editor built right in.
>>
>> Just start R, choose file->new to open a script and you are away.
>>
>> There is line numbering, coloured context for functions etc, smart brackets and quotes and keystrokes to send the code you select to the console:
>>
>> cmd+return to send selected text or the line you are on.
>>
>> You've got all you need to get started quickly (and perhaps all you need), courtesy of the excellent development team for the mac.
>>
>> Good luck.
>> Andrew
>> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>> Dr. Andrew Beckerman
>> Department of Animal and Plant Sciences
>> University of Sheffield
>> Sheffield S10 2TN
>> UK
>>
>> a.beckerman at sheffield.ac.uk
>> http://www.beckslab.staff.shef.ac.uk
>>
>>
>>
>> On 26 Jan 2011, at 20:16, Kristina Krsteva wrote:
>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I have never used R before and I need to use it for a time series graduate
>>> course AND i have a mac. I know tinn-R is a great text editor for R that
>>> works on Windows but is there anything comparable to it for a Mac? I have
>>> read multiple threads and my current findings are that there is really
>>> nothing like tinn-R for a mac and that TextMate comes close (but
>>> unfortunately this costs), some have said that they like the internal editor
>>> as well. I would like to use a more "user-friendly" editor, if possible, and
>>> I've been searching for hours now trying to figure out what to download and
>>> start learning, until I stumbled upon this mailing list and was wondering if
>>> someone could guide me and tell me what would be the most feasible option
>>> for an editor and save me some time:)
>>>
>>> Thank you so much,
>>> k
>>>
>>> [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> R-SIG-Mac mailing list
>>> R-SIG-Mac at r-project.org
>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-mac
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>> R-SIG-Mac at r-project.org
>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-mac
>>
>
> cheers,
> tim
>
> Timothy Bates
> Professor of Individual Differences in Psychology
> University of Edinburgh
> 7 George Square EH8 9JZ
> +44.131 651 1945
>
>
> --
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> Scotland, with registration number SC005336.
>
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