On Sep 20, 2013, at 11:29 AM, peter dalgaard <[email protected]> wrote:

> 
> On Sep 20, 2013, at 08:49 , Prof Brian Ripley wrote:
>>> 
>> 
>> I am not so sure about that.  It will do no harm running CRAN binary R.  But 
>> it does mean that there are multiple versions of X11 things about and that 
>> will cause problems for other things (including possibly installing packages 
>> from source).
> 
> 
> Or, put differently, we could be shipping libraries that are incompatible 
> with the system libraries (or 3rd party libraries for that matter) if those 
> are not kept up to date. 
> 
> Of course, keeping versions compatible is exactly what package managers are 
> for, on systems that have them. The way things work on commercial platforms 
> tend to lead each applicationq into rolling everything you need into the 
> application itself, which is - in the bigger perspective - wasteful and 
> somewhat risky (as defective components only get replaced upon upgrade of the 
> application). 
> 
> I know Simon distrusts them, but sometimes I do feel that we should work more 
> closely with the people doing managed distributions for OSX, i.e. MacPorts, 
> Homebrew, Fink. (Not sure how they'd cope with missing OS updates, though.)
> 

I don't have the time or resources to support more than one distribution. Given 
that the native port is what covers the vast majority of users, I feel that I'm 
spending my limited time well. However, I would certainly encourage people that 
want to create other R distributions to collaborate with us and I'd be very 
happy to share my experience and discuss issues with them. Historically, 
distributions like MacPorts or Fink had very poor quality of ports (to a point 
where R was not really working), mainly because the authors had apparently no 
idea about either R or OS X. I was never able to get any response to issues 
raised, so I gave up. The bright exception is Homebrew - it has much better 
design (it doesn't try to setup a parallel universe that breaks everything) and 
I was working with Max on technical issues in the early days, so the my 
experience was very positive. I didn't check it out recently (again, lack of 
spare time), but the design was very promising. 

Cheers,
Simon


> -- 
> Peter Dalgaard, Professor
> Center for Statistics, Copenhagen Business School
> Solbjerg Plads 3, 2000 Frederiksberg, Denmark
> Phone: (+45)38153501
> Email: [email protected]  Priv: [email protected]
> 
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