Uwe Ligges <ligges <at> statistik.uni-dortmund.de> writes: : : Gabor Grothendieck wrote: : : > Duncan Murdoch <dmurdoch <at> pair.com> writes: : > : > : On Sun, 11 Jul 2004 21:28:44 +0000 (UTC), Gabor Grothendieck : > : <ggrothendieck <at> myway.com> wrote: : > : : > : > : >1. when I run skeleton.package realize that I must use the arg : > : > path = "library" : > : > The example that is shown there appears to omit that. : > : : > : The default is to put it in the current directory. The assumption is : > : that you started R where you want to work, or have switched to that : > : directory later. This is usually true for Unix users, but generally : > : not for Windows users. : > : : > : I'm not sure what sort of change to make here. path = "library" : > : (literally) won't usually work, because it won't try to create the : > : directory. Suggestion? : > : > Perhaps we could use: : > : > path = .libPaths()[[1]] : > : > as the default value of path in package.skeleton. : : Actually, that's a bad idea, because you don't want a source package in : your binary library tree. : I'm really happy with the default and the documentation which tells us : about the "path" argument. Most (all?) functions I know do write to the : current working directory. You do not want another default for : write.table() et al. to write the data to, do you?
The objective should be that creating a package is as easy as this: f <- function()1; g <- function()2; d <- 3; e <- 4:5 package.skeleton(list=c("f","g","d","e"), name="AnExample") library(AnExample) f() which means that the package needs to be inserted where library will find it. It should not be necessary to have an understanding of this. ______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide! http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html