Hello, As you can see from my signature in this message, I use the R
fortune function to generate a fortune, which is then fed to the
signature program, which constructs a named pipe containing the
fortune-bearing sig, which is then included in mail messages. The
problem is that it's got
On Sep 1, 2010, at 4:49 PM, Stuart Luppescu wrote:
Hello, As you can see from my signature in this message, I use the R
fortune function to generate a fortune, which is then fed to the
signature program, which constructs a named pipe containing the
fortune-bearing sig, which is then included
On 1 September 2010 at 15:49, Stuart Luppescu wrote:
| Hello, As you can see from my signature in this message, I use the R
| fortune function to generate a fortune, which is then fed to the
| signature program, which constructs a named pipe containing the
| fortune-bearing sig, which is then
Simply using option --slave instead seems to do the trick.
$ /usr/bin/R --slave test-fortune.R
Similarly to Brian, I'm much more reluctant to help people who don't
exist --
who knows, maybe you're a computer program who has just passed the
Turing test
:-)
-- Martin Maechler (about
Or using R GNU tools:
m...@max:~$ R -e fortunes::fortune() | gawk '/^[^]/ {print}'
It's not a question of trying variations, rather of following
instructions.
-- Brian D. Ripley (about using 'Writing R Extensions')
R-help (January 2006)
-Matt
On Wed, 2010-09-01 at 16:49 -0400, Stuart
On Wed, 2010-09-01 at 16:32 -0500, Christian Raschke wrote:
Simply using option --slave instead seems to do the trick.
$ /usr/bin/R --slave test-fortune.R
Great! Thanks very much, Christian. Matt Shotwell, I didn't try your
solution, since Christian's is so simple, but thanks for writing
On 01/09/10 22:18, Dirk Eddelbuettel wrote:
[...]
Doing the same with Rscript is left as an exercise
I like exercises:
Rscript --default-packages=fortunes -e print(fortune())
Allan
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