[Rd] Suggestion: help(<package name>)

Robert Gentleman rgentlem at fhcrc.org
Tue Jun 7 17:59:33 CEST 2005



Duncan Murdoch wrote:
> On 6/7/2005 11:12 AM, Robert Gentleman wrote:
> 
>>
>> Robin Hankin wrote:
>>
>>> My 0.02:
>>>
>>> I use Misc.Rd for the purpose that Duncan suggests.  I put things 
>>> like details and rationale for package
>>> organization, pointers to the most important function(s) in the 
>>> package,  and perhaps function descriptors
>>> for ubiquitous functions that don't warrant their own helppage, but 
>>> need documentation [in
>>> the case of gsl, this would be strictify() and process.args(), which 
>>> every user needs to know].
>>>
>>> It would be *great* to be required to put in "package.gsl.R"  (or 
>>> should that be "gsl.package.Rd"?)
>>> for this purpose.  Then maybe R CMD check could check for its 
>>> presence and throw a wobbly
>>> if it isn't there.
>>>
>>
>> Hi,
>>   Well, I pretty strenuously object. That is just what vignettes are 
>> for and the last thing I need is more wobbly's from R CMD check.
>>
>> Function documentation should document functions. If you want to 
>> document something more substantial then please use the tools already 
>> provided to do that - and if you don't want to, and you want to make 
>> use of the tools for function documentation in some other way please 
>> don't try to impose your version of what should happen on others.
> 
> 
> The current .Rd files don't just document functions, they also document 
> data objects and classes.
> 
> But the main point here is that it's not good to have multiple 
> disconnected sets of documentation for a package.  Users should be able 
> to say the equivalent of "give me help on foo", and get help on foo, 
> whether it's a function, a data object, a package, a method, a class, or 
> whatever.  It's a bad design to force them to ask for the same sort of 
> thing in different ways depending on the type of thing they're asking for.
> 

Hi Duncan and others,
   I think they are linked. There are tools available both in R and in 
Bioconductor and some pop things up and some don't. It doesn't take much 
work to add vignettes to the windows menu bar - as we have done in BioC 
for some time now - it would be nice if this was part of R, but no one 
seems to have been interested in achieving that. Fixing the help system 
to deal with more diverse kinds of help would be nice as well - but 
taking one part of it and saying, "now everyone must do it this way" is 
not that helpful.

  I respectfully disagree about the main point. My main point is, I 
don't want more things imposed on me; dealing with  R CMD check is 
enough of a burden in its current version, without someone deciding that 
it would be nice to have a whole bunch more requirements. Folks should 
feel entirely free to do what they want - but a little less free to tell 
me what I should be doing.

  Best wishes,
    Robert


> If we had a way to link vignettes into the help system, then I'd think 
> it would be perfectly acceptable for ?package to pop up a vignette for 
> the package.  However, right now we have too many different types of 
> ways to display help, and not all of them are capable of displaying 
> vignettes.
> 
> Duncan Murdoch
> 
> 
>>
>> Best wishes
>>    Robert
>>
>>> Some packages have so  much material that it's difficult to know 
>>> where the "meat" of the functionality lies,
>>> and Duncan's suggestion would help greatly in these circumstances.
>>>
>>> best wishes
>>>
>>> rksh
>>>
>>>
>>> On Jun 7, 2005, at 01:11 pm, Duncan Murdoch wrote:
>>>
>>>> Kurt Hornik wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Henrik Bengtsson writes:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>> I would like to suggest a standard where all packages provide an 
>>>>>> Rd page with the same name (or aliased) as the name of package so 
>>>>>> that help(<package name>) or ?<package name> is always here. This 
>>>>>> especially of interest to large packages with a large package 
>>>>>> index. This page could explain the package in general and gives 
>>>>>> some hints on how to start - not like extensive vignettes, but 
>>>>>> just to get started, e.g. list the "most important" functions.  
>>>>>> This page could typically contain information that is in the 
>>>>>> DESCRIPTION file (which contains valuable information hardly every 
>>>>>> accessed by a general user), such as who is the maintainer, how to 
>>>>>> report bugs and so on.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I think this is a good idea.  One minor problem is that for some 
>>>> packages that topic name is already in use for a function (e.g. 
>>>> boot). For that reason, I'd suggest that there *also* be an alias 
>>>> called "package.<package name>", and the <package name> topic should 
>>>> link to it.
>>>>
>>>>> How would this be different from the results of
>>>>>     help(package = <package name>)
>>>>> ?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> 1.  It would work with ?, like other help topics.
>>>>
>>>> 2.  It would give an overview.  It's possible to do that in 
>>>> DESCRIPTION or INDEX, but you don't get the same style as for other 
>>>> help files (e.g. no links to other topics, at least in Windows).
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> We should work out what the topic headings should be and extend 
>>>> package.skeleton() and prompt() to write a bare-bones file that 
>>>> suggests the questions that need to be answered in the file.  The 
>>>> headings I'd suggest are:
>>>>
>>>> \name
>>>> \title
>>>> \alias
>>>> \description (longer than the typical entry in the DESCRIPTION file)
>>>> \details (Should give a short guide to the main functions, should 
>>>> point out the existence of external documentation like vignettes, etc.)
>>>> \author (could also describe maintainer, if different)
>>>> \references
>>>> \seealso (Should give references to related packages)
>>>> \examples
>>>> \keywords
>>>>
>>>> There is some duplication of material from DESCRIPTION, but usually 
>>>> this should be longer and more reader-friendly than that file.
>>>>
>>>> I'd be happy to write the description of this in R Extensions, and 
>>>> write the changes to prompt(), if we have agreement that this file 
>>>> should be mandatory in 2.2.x or 2.3.x, and you'll write the checks 
>>>> for it.  (I think the check should just be for existence of aliases 
>>>> <package name> and package.<package name>, and could perhaps just 
>>>> give a warning in 2.2.x.)
>>>>
>>>> Duncan Murdoch
>>>>
>>>> ______________________________________________
>>>> R-devel at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list
>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
>>>>
>>>>
>>> -- 
>>> Robin Hankin
>>> Uncertainty Analyst
>>> National Oceanography Centre, Southampton
>>> European Way, Southampton SO14 3ZH, UK
>>>  tel  023-8059-7743
>>>
>>> ______________________________________________
>>> R-devel at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list
>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
>>>
>



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