On Fri, Aug 24, 2007 at 10:57:46AM -0400, Duncan Murdoch wrote: > On 8/24/2007 10:33 AM, Dirk Eddelbuettel wrote: >> On Fri, Aug 24, 2007 at 08:32:00AM -0400, Duncan Murdoch wrote: >>> On 8/24/2007 6:58 AM, Ronaldo Reis Junior wrote: >>> > Hi, >>> > > It is possible to use a shell command inside a R script? >>> > > I'm write a R script and I like to put somes shell commands inside to >>> R. > Somethink like: convert fig01.png fig01.xpm or sed ..., etc. >>> The details and available functions depend on the platform, but you want >>> to look at ?system, ?shell, and/or ?shell.exec. (These all exist in >>> Windows; on Unix-alikes, you probably won't have the latter two.) >> Don't forget pipes. R's ability to consistently work on connections that >> may be local >> files, remotes files, program output, ... is a true treasure (and >> thanks and credits to, I believe, Brian Ripley to make it so). >> Eg you can do this OD <- read.table(pipe("links -dump >> http://cran.r-project.org/src/contrib/ | awk '/tar.gz/ {print $3, $4}'"), >> header=FALSE, col.names=c("file", "date")) >> to get files and dates of files on CRAN. As I recall, this also works on >> that other operating system, provided >> you do all the legwork of installing other tools, setting PATHs etc >> to provide what works out of the box on the supposedly unfriendlier OS. > > The pipe command you list doesn't work in Windows. I'd guess this is > because the pipe syntax "|" within the command is unsupported: it tries to > execute "links", with the rest of the line passed as arguments. But I > haven't traced through to check on this.
Hm, wishful thinking must have gotten the better of me then. Sorry for spreading misinformation about the capabilities of that other OS. Dirk -- Three out of two people have difficulties with fractions. ______________________________________________ R-help@stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.