[R] The Origins of R AND CALCULUS
Mark Difford
mark_difford at yahoo.co.uk
Thu Feb 5 12:53:39 CET 2009
Peter Dalgaard wrote:
>> This of course does not mean that the current R should not acknowledge
>> its substantial S heritage, just that if you want to describe the early
>> history of R
>> accurately, you do need to choose your words rather more carefully.
Point taken, Peter. But I wan't trying to give an accurate portrayal of the
origins of R. That was Mr. Vance's obligation. I was attempting to show how
easy it would be for someone who is a writer by profession to make
reasonable, and proper, reference to R's "substantial S heritage...," as you
yourself put it. And that, really, I feel, is the point.
Peter Dalgaard wrote:
>
> Mark Difford wrote:
>
>>
>> It would have been very easy for Mr. Vance to have written:
>>
>> John M. Chambers, a former Bell Labs researcher who is now a consulting
>> professor of statistics at Stanford University, was an early champion. At
>> Bell Labs, Mr. Chambers had helped develop S, THE PROTOTYPE OF R, which
>> was
>> meant to give researchers of all stripes an accessible data analysis
>> tool.
>>
>
> ...except that it would be wrong in about as many ways. (In fact,
> referring to S (v.3) as "the prototype" was an internal R Core joke for
> quite a while.) Two major points:
>
> - S-PLUS was at the time a strong commercial product, not a prototype of
> anything, and calling it that would be disrespectful to quite a few
> people working for and with StatSci/Insightful/TIBCO and their
> international distributors, as well as the Bell Labs/Lucent Technologies
> group. It couldn't touch the "dinosaurs" SAS and SPSS, but it did reach
> a level of more than 100000 licenced users. It took several years for R
> to get to a credibility level where it was even known outside some
> narrow academic circles.
>
> - S compatibility was not a primary goal of R. The original plan was for
> a Scheme-like language with "syntactic sugar" making in "not unlike" S.
> The potential for running existing S scripts with minimal modifications
> drove R much closer to S than originally anticipated. This of course
> does not mean that the current R should not acknowledge its substantial
> S heritage, just that if you want to describe the early history of R
> accurately, you do need to choose your words rather more carefully.
>
> --
> O__ ---- Peter Dalgaard Øster Farimagsgade 5, Entr.B
> c/ /'_ --- Dept. of Biostatistics PO Box 2099, 1014 Cph. K
> (*) \(*) -- University of Copenhagen Denmark Ph: (+45) 35327918
> ~~~~~~~~~~ - (p.dalgaard at biostat.ku.dk) FAX: (+45) 35327907
>
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