The link works fine for me on firefox, chrome and safari.

Other ways to get to it are:
- search "rcpp mailing list" on google.
- go to r-forge (again google knows where), click on the "Rcpp - R/C++ interface", click on the "Lists" tab, click on subscribe, etc ...


Le 17/03/10 04:42, Jeremie Smaga a écrit :
I found the problem for the package that wasn't found... My R version was
2.9.
Sorry about that.

However, I would really appreciate it if you could let me know where I could
find the mailing list...


Thanks,

Jeremie

On Tue, Mar 16, 2010 at 6:56 PM, Romain Francois
<rom...@r-enthusiasts.com>wrote:

Hello,

disclaimer: I don't know C# at all and how it might connect to c++, etc ...

For an introductory ride about Rcpp, you can consult the Rcpp-introduction
vignette which you can download from the cran page of Rcpp or if you have it
installed, you can just do:

vignette( "Rcpp-introduction", package = "Rcpp" )

For semi-self-explanatory code examples, you can consult our unit tests:

system.file( "unitTests", package = "Rcpp" )

For more questions, we have a dedicated mailing list:
https://lists.r-forge.r-project.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/rcpp-devel

Romain


Le 16/03/10 11:43, Jeremie Smaga a écrit :


Hello Richard,

Thanks for the tips.

I was aware of the R(D)COM. In the last public version, there is now
splash
screen appearing which is kind of boring so I think I need to buy it or
something.

Anyway, I think the idea was to create a common CORE library that can be
used from C# and from R. So I think I'll have a look at RCPP which looks
to
be the best solution.

Have you tried it already? Do you know any good tutorial for this package?

Thanks,

Jeremie


On Tue, Mar 16, 2010 at 5:23 PM,<richard.cot...@hsl.gov.uk>   wrote:


  I would like to develop a core library which I will be using both from R

and

from C#.


  - Writing the DLL freely in C# and then create a wrapper?
- Writing it in C++
- Writing it in C, the other options are really not good ideas.


As far as I know, there currently is no way to call .NET code from R.  If
you want a library that can be called from both a .NET environment and
from
R, then writing it in C or C++ is likely your best bet.  Alternatively,
you
can run R code from within .NET using the rcom package.  There's an
example
in F# here (what's true for F# is true for C#).



http://cs.hubfs.net/blogs/thepopeofthehub/archive/2007/11/06/FSharpWithR.aspx

See ?.C for calling C code, and the rcpp package for an interface to C++
code.  Choosing between those two languages mostly depends on whether on
not
your library is especially suited to object oriented programming or not.

Regards,
Richie.

Mathematical Sciences Unit*
**HSL*<http://www.hsl.gov.uk/contact-us.htm>



r-help-boun...@r-project.org wrote on 16/03/2010 09:04:54:


  Good afternoon everybody,

I am sorry, this question might look trivial to some of you, but I read
quite a lot of stuff about package creation and I would like a bit of
you
advices.



I read that it was possible to import DLL to R.

The thing is, I am not sure that the DLL created with C# will be

compatible.

I still have not implemented anything, so if it is only a matter of

method

signatures, I can make sure everything fits.

Otherwise, I could use a C++ DLL, but I don't know if it is really
recommended. (In fact, I would love to be able to develop it in Visual
Studio because it is where I developed the rest of my platform).

So, what would you advise?



Thanks,

--
Jeremie Smaga


--
Romain Francois
Professional R Enthusiast
+33(0) 6 28 91 30 30
http://romainfrancois.blog.free.fr
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