[Rd] Getting started with .C
Sharpie
chuck at sharpsteen.net
Tue Apr 13 04:11:23 CEST 2010
Jeff Brown wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to learn to use .C, which lets one invoke compiled C code from
> within R. To do that, one has to first get the C code into R as a shared
> object, which (I think) means first compiling it (with COMPILE or SHLIB)
> and then loading it (with dyn.load()).
>
I would suggest taking it a step further and building an R package to hold
your compiled code. The pros are:
* It keeps the R wrapper scripts and other things you will end up
creating packaged together with your code.
* It handles compilation automagically during installation.
* It handles loading the dylib for you.
The only con I can think of is:
* It takes ~2 extra minutes of your time to set up. But compared to
other languages I have used this is a ridiculously small price to pay for
the portability and organization offered by packages.
I wrote a post that goes through step-by-step how to do this for the .Call()
interface, including example code. You can find it at:
http://n4.nabble.com/Writing-own-simulation-function-in-C-td1580190.html#a1580423
In "Writing R Extensions", p. 79, they give the following example of a C
program for convolution of two vectors. (The details aren't important; it's
just a function that does something to some stuff.)
void convolve (double *a, int *na, double *b, int *nb, double *ab) {
int i, j, nab = *na + *nb - 1;
for(i = 0; i < nab; i++)
ab[i] = 0.0;
for(i = 0; i < *na; i++)
for(j = 0; j < *nb; j++)
ab[i + j] += a[i] * b[j]
}
Jeff Brown wrote:
>
> The document suggests calling it from R like this (again the details
> aren't important):
>
> conv <- function(a, b)
> .C("convolve",
> as.double(a),
> as.integer(length(a)),
> as.double(b),
> as.integer(length(b)),
> ab = double(length(a) + length(b) - 1))$ab
>
> I wrote a file, "convolve.c", with nothing but the above C code in it. I
> can't figure out how to compile it. I don't understand the syntax (no
> parentheses?) and I always get the same information-free error message:
>
>> list.files()
> [1] "AER" "convolve.c" "sendmailR"
>> R CMD SHLIB "compile.c"
> Error: syntax error
>> COMPILE "compile.c"
> Error: syntax error
>> R CMD SHLIB "compile"
> Error: syntax error
>> COMPILE "compile"
> Error: syntax error
>> R CMD SHLIB compile.c
> Error: syntax error
>> COMPILE compile.c
> Error: syntax error
>> R CMD SHLIB compile
> Error: syntax error
>> COMPILE compile
> Error: syntax error
>
> I'm using an Intel MacBook Pro running Leopard. At a console, typing "gcc
> --version" yields 4.2.1. I know I'm supposed to be using version 4.2; I
> thought 4.2.1 would qualify, but please let me know if I'm wrong about
> that.
>
> For guidance I've been relying on "Writing R Extensions", "R Installatino
> and Administration", the "R for Mac OS X Developer's Page", and the
> built-in help. Please let me know if there are other important resources
> I've missed.
>
> Many thanks,
> Jeff
>
All R CMD commands must be executed at the command line- i.e. in a Windows
CMD shell or Unix/Linux bash shell. They are not meant for use inside the R
interpreter.
Hope this helps!
-Charlie
-----
Charlie Sharpsteen
Undergraduate-- Environmental Resources Engineering
Humboldt State University
--
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