On 16/09/2018 4:53 AM, Voeten, C.C. wrote:
Hello,

I have found what I believe to be a bug in the Linux version of the Rscript 
binary.
Under Windows (official 64-bit 3.5.1 R distribution running on an up-to-date 
Win10), I can do the following (e.g. under powershell):

PS H:\Users\Cesko> Rscript -e 'ls()
ls()'
character(0)
character(0)

which works as I expect: I am running Rscript with two arguments, namely (1) 
'-e', and (2) two lines of code to be run, and it indeed executes those two 
lines of code.

This fails when attempted on a Linux build (amd64, compiled from the official 
3.5.1 sources, but also reproducible with today's r-devel snapshot):

$ Rscript -e 'ls()
ls()'
ARGUMENT 'ls()' __ignored__

character(0)

This behavior is not what I expected. Have I found a bug, or am I simply using 
it wrong?

I would not assume that shell behaviour in Windows and Unix would always be the same. A better comparison would be to list some other command on the same system that behaves differently. For example, on MacOS I see

$ echo 'ls()
> ls()'
ls()
ls()


which suggests that what you wrote should be legal, but the form of that command is different: there's no equivalent of "-e". Maybe someone else who knows Unix shell behaviour better can comment on whether they'd expect your Rscript command to work.

By the way, if you just want multiple commands to execute, you can separate them by semi-colons, and that does work:

$ Rscript -e 'ls(); ls()'
character(0)
character(0)

And I see this, which may explain the original problem:

$ Rscript -e 'commandArgs(); ls()'
[1] "/Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Resources/bin/exec/R"
[2] "--slave"
[3] "--no-restore"
[4] "-e"
[5] "commandArgs();~+~ls()"
character(0)

Notice that argument 5 includes both commands, whereas with the newline they are separated:

$ Rscript -e 'commandArgs()
> ls()'
ARGUMENT 'ls()' __ignored__

[1] "/Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Resources/bin/exec/R"
[2] "--slave"
[3] "--no-restore"
[4] "-e"
[5] "commandArgs()"
[6] "ls()"

And finally, this also works:

Rscript -e 'ls()
-e
ls()'


Duncan Murdoch

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