> pertain to packages. So I will post the relevant code here, and the full > output from verbose=TRUE below it:
I think the verbose output was missing from your email (?). > linktest<-cxxfunction( signature( vec = "numeric", len = "integer" ), paste( > readLines( > "/home/simon/College/PackageOne/src/BZip/LinkTestWrap.cpp"),collapse = "\n" > ) , plugin = "Rcpp",verbose=TRUE ) > ... > 2. LinkTestWrap.cpp: Rcpp Wrapping Function (for use by inline) > #include <Rcpp.h> > #include <vector> > #include "/home/simon/College/PackageOne/src/BZip/LinkTest.h" > > using std::vector; > > vector<int> input_vector( as< vector<int> >( vec ) ); > int length = as<int> ( len ); > > int res = sumvec( input_vector ); > > return Rcpp::wrap( res ); Does this mean you have three #include statements inside your function body? The cxxfunction has an includes parameter where you should put them. I think of "includes" as meaning "global stuff". So you could put your "using std::vector" line in there too (that is just a style difference, though). Also, IIRC, plugin="Rcpp" implies the #include <Rcpp.h>, so you should be able to drop that. Darren -- Darren Cook, Software Researcher/Developer http://dcook.org/work/ (About me and my work) http://dcook.org/blogs.html (My blogs and articles) _______________________________________________ Rcpp-devel mailing list Rcpp-devel@lists.r-forge.r-project.org https://lists.r-forge.r-project.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/rcpp-devel