On Wed, 9 Feb 2005 00:02:53 +0100, Achim Zeileis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Tue, 08 Feb 2005 22:19:46 -0000 (GMT) (Ted Harding) wrote: > > > On 08-Feb-05 Kurt Hornik wrote: > > > Afaic, one of the issues is that it seems common practice to refer > > > to collections of code as "libraries" or "packages", and we're > > > trying to use these rather general-purpose terms in a very precise > > > meaning, and obviously not very successful, in particular because > > > the use of"library" is highly non-standard. One idea might be to > > > replace the"library" by something else like ... "a place where R > > > knows where to find packages" ... hmm, now that's too long, so ... > > > > The only issue I have with "library" vs "package" (or vice versa) > > is the following. > > > > I *know* that a collection of functions etc. (such as nlme) is > > properly called a "package". I could (and do) get ticked off if > > I refer to it as a "library". > > > > However, if I want to use it then I enter > > > > library(nlme) > > > > As a result, the little daemons who potter around re-wiring > > my mental circuits sometimes cross-connect these two. As a > > result, I can inadvertently refer to "the nlme library". > > > > An example is a recent mailing of mine to the list where > > I twice referred to a certain "library" (and was amiably > > rebuked by Martic Maechler) -- but then I saw that I had > > also twice referred to the same "package" in the same mail! > > > > Personally I don't mind whether it is called "package" or > > "library", though using the command library() to load a > > package does tend, as described, to get me treading on my > > own shoelaces. > > > > But, a propos, is there an R entity called a "library" > > (other than the command) as distinct from a "package"? > > A *library* is a directory in which you can find R *packages* (just as > in real life you can find books in a library) and with > library("foo", lib.loc = "/path/to/bar") > you want to get the package (book) "foo" from the library "bar" located > at "/path/to/bar". > > So the two are really distinct...in real life, you also wouldn't say > that you have been in the book where they had a lot of libraries on the > shelves, would you? ;-) > > But as Kurt explained: this distinction between "library" and "package" > is specific to R and does not correspond to common practice for other > software systems. > Z
Sure, but I'm not specifying which library I'd like to get the packages from, thus it might be make perfect sense to say: loadPackage("foo",library="bar") But when I'm typing library, I'm loading a package, NOT specifying a library to use. Package is also confusing -- I keep thinking of it as a noun, as a package specifier, while others like it as a verb; this was a useful point for me that one person made. But perhaps then adding the verb (well, I can see the point against, but hear it out) might be useful. Thus, package(action,location,name) might be a useful function signature, though possibly not in that order. -- best, -tony "Commit early,commit often, and commit in a repository from which we can easily roll-back your mistakes" (AJR, 4Jan05). A.J. Rossini [EMAIL PROTECTED] ______________________________________________ R-devel@stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel