#!/usr/bin/env r ## for use in scripts
other input | r ## for use in pipes
r somefile.R ## for running files
r -e 'expr' ## for evaluating expressions
r --help ## to show a quick synopsis
Plenty. See the examples vignette for a full set of introductory examples. Also see the examples/ directory for a full 28 example scripts, as well as maybe the older tests directory both of which are installed with the package.
Some scripts I use daily or near daily (in alphabetical order):
build.r ## builds from the current directory
c4c.r ## submits current directory to winbuilder
compAttr.r ## run compileAttributes() for a Rcpp package
dratInstert.r 1.2-3.tar.gz -r /srv ## inserts package into drat repo
install.r abc def ## installs packages abc and def
install.r abc_1.2-3.tar.gz ## installs given tarball
install2.r -l /tmp/lib abc def ## installs abc and def into /tmp/lib
rcc.r abc_1.2-3.tar.gz ## run's R CMD check via Gabor's rcmdcheck
render.r foo.Rmd ## calls rmarkdown::render()
roxy.r ## run roxygenize() for a package (only Rd creation)
update.r ## updates any currently installed packages
The package resides on the CRAN network and can be installed via
install.packages("littler")
Note that the package states OS_type: unix
. It works great on all Linux
variants, with a naming caveat on macOS (see below and the FAQ
vignettes)
and not at all on Windows (but could be ported just like
RInside has been--the two show
architectural similarities).
In general, simply running the script bootstrap
will configure and build the
executable. Running make install
(possibly as sudo make install
) will
install the resulting binary.
On Linux systems, ensure you have the autotools-dev
package (or its
equivalent on non-Debian/Ubuntu systems). On OS X, you may need to run brew install automake autoconf
to get all the tools.
On some operating systems such as OS X, r
is not different from R
. As
this risks confusing the main binary R
for the R system with our smaller
scripting frontend r
, we suggest to consider running configure --program-prefix="l"
which this leads to installation of a binary lr
instead of r
.
As littler uses autoconf its AC_PATH_PROG()
macro to find R
, one can
simply adjust the PATH
when calling configure
(or, rather, bootstrap
)
to have another version of R used. For example, on a server with R-devel in
this location, the following builds littler using this R-devel version:
PATH="/usr/local/lib/R-devel/bin/:$PATH" ./bootstrap
.
For more information about littler, please see
(but note that the latter now overlaps with the example vignette).
Jeff Horner (2006 to 2008) and Dirk Eddelbuettel (since 2006)
GPL (>= 2)