[R] Glossay of available R functions
Patricia J. Hawkins
phawkins at connact.com
Sun Feb 5 23:48:14 CET 2006
>>>>> "PBR" == Prof Brian Ripley <ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk> writes:
>> commenting that subset was new to him, though he did say "list of
>> functions in R". I'd searched through everything _else_ in the help
>> system looking for such a glossary; I hadn't thought to look under
>> *Packages*, as those are, of course, add-ons.
PBR> `Of course' is incorrect here. Everything in R is in a package.
Just my thinking at the time; once I realized that everything in R is
a package, it occurred to me to look under the "packages" heading.
But that was after reading the R Language Reference Manual, and
working through a good bit of the Introduction To R.
>> So a comment such as "For an index of R basic objects, see the
>> 'base' package under *Packages*" on the help.start() index page
>> would be helpful.
PBR> But (as I originally pointed out), that is not a correct
PBR> interpretation of `basic'. It might have been in R 1.8.0, but
PBR> the 'base' package is now intended to support only some scripting
PBR> operations (where speed is essential so it is minimal). Unlike
PBR> Python, R is not primarily a scripting language.
Oh -- I understand; thank you. In retrospect, I was looking for the
things clueless (or cluefull) newcomers should be familiar with before
coming and bothering R-help with clueless newcomer questions.
I didn't mean to try your patience -- just to suggest a couple of
links in the documentation so that well-written information that
exists, and that *ought* to hit newcomers like a brick, would in fact
hit us like a brick.
PBR> The analogue of the Python Standard Library is I think the
PBR> standard packages.
Thank you! That's helpful.
--
Patricia J. Hawkins
Hawkins Internet Applications
www.hawkinsia.com
"blundering through software language manuals since 1979"
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