[Rd] setting global options for a package

Duncan Temple Lang duncan at wald.ucdavis.edu
Thu May 10 19:53:25 CEST 2012


Or slightly more conveniently, use the default value of getOption() to return the vector
of color names if the option is not set, e.g.

 foo <- function(x, heplot.colors = getOption("heplot.colors",
                                               c("red", "blue", "black", "darkgreen", "brown", "darkgray")), ...)  {


   D.

On 5/10/12 10:09 AM, Simon Urbanek wrote:
> 
> On May 10, 2012, at 9:59 AM, Michael Friendly wrote:
> 
>> This may be elementary, but I can't find an answer: How can I set up global options for
>> some specific arguments to functions in a package which can be easily changed by the user?
>>
>> This question relates to the selection of colors used in functions in several packages (heplots,
>> genridge), where I want to provide reasonable default values for plots, but allow users to
>> change those defaults globally for all plots produced with my functions.
>>
>> One solution is to use palette() for the default, as in
>>
>> foo <- function(x, col=palette(), ...)  {}
>> but the standard palette is not appropriate for my use, and I'd rather not hijack more typical uses
>>
>> Another is to use an explicit list of colors for default, as in
>>
>> bar <- function(x, col=c('red', 'blue', 'brown', 'darkgreen', ...), ...)  {}
>> but this must be overridden each time by someone to wants to change the defaults.
>>
>> options() seems like the way to go, but I'm not sure how to implement this.  If I use
>> a .onLoad function to set some options, will these be created in the global environment?
>> If not, how to make them so?
>>
>> .onLoad <- function() {
>>  options(heplot.colors =
>>  c("red", "blue", "black", "darkgreen", "darkcyan","magenta", "brown","darkgray"))
> 
> You certainly don't want to do that - it would override user's setting and thus defeat the whole purpose of options.
> 
> 
>> }
>>
>> My function could then use
>>
>> foo <- function(x, getOption("heplot.colors"), ...)  {}
>>
> 
> You can always do that:
> 
> foo <- function(x, heplot.colors = getOption("heplot.colors"), ...)  {
>   if (is.null(heplot.colors)) heplot.colors <- c("red", "blue", "black", "darkgreen", "darkcyan","magenta", "brown","darkgray")
> 
> Cheers,
> Simon
> 
> 
>>
>> -- 
>> Michael Friendly     Email: friendly AT yorku DOT ca
>> Professor, Psychology Dept.
>> York University      Voice: 416 736-5115 x66249 Fax: 416 736-5814
>> 4700 Keele Street    Web:   http://www.datavis.ca
>> Toronto, ONT  M3J 1P3 CANADA
>>
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>>
>>
> 
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