On 07.05.2019 19:57, Duncan Murdoch wrote:
On 06/05/2019 12:16 p.m., Jim Hester wrote:
For what it's worth, the recommendation to use `tempfile()` is very
confusing to R users.
Often users (particularly new users) jump directly to examples when
reading documentation and when you have these more complicated
examples they do not realize they can just use a simple string
literal.
See https://github.com/tidyverse/readr/issues/635 for an issue where
multiple users explicitly request examples which do _not_ use
`tempfile()`.
I think beginners rarely like the help pages, and that's really to be
expected: help pages need to be complete and correct, and beginners
really need a small subset of possibilities. Beginners need tutorials.
In the Github issue, you mentioned pollution of the working directory,
but I think a bigger problem is destruction of user data, e.g. if a user
has a file "wine.csv", and the example writes to that file.
So you need to do something to protect users. I think making examples a
little complicated by using setwd(tempdir()) with a literal filename, or
writing to tempfile() is worth it.
Thank you, Duncan. Well, setwd(tempdir()) should be made local to the
examples if used at all, as the user may not expect to have the working
directory changed.
Best,
Uwe
Duncan Murdoch
On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 7:59 PM Duncan Murdoch
<murdoch.dun...@gmail.com> wrote:
On 03/05/2019 6:33 p.m., Jarrett Phillips wrote:
Hello,
My R package has a function with an argument to specify whether
numerical
results should be outputted to a CSV file.
CRAN policy stipulates verbatim that
Packages should not write in the user’s home filespace (including
clipboards), nor anywhere else on the file system apart from the R
session’s temporary directory (or during installation in the location
pointed to by TMPDIR: and such usage should be cleaned up).
Installing into
the system’s R installation (e.g., scripts to its bin directory) is not
allowed.
I know I should use tempdir() within my package function, but I've
not seen
any examples on how this is best done within existing R packages.
Within my package documentation examples for my function, I have the
lines:
\dontshow{.oldwd <- setwd(tempdir())}
... some R code ...
\dontshow{setwd(.oldwd)}
but I have been informed that this is not the accepted way.
Any ideas from the community on how do do this properly?
Use the tempfile() function to generate a filename in the temporary
directory. You might want to use the "pattern" or "fileext" arguments,
but don't change the "tmpdir" argument.
Then write to that file.
For example,
filename <- tempfile(fileext = ".csv")
write.csv(df, filename)
It's a good idea to clean up afterwards using
unlink(filename)
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