[R-pkg-devel] Undocumented requirement for CRAN

Jiří Moravec j|r|@c@mor@vec @end|ng |rom gm@||@com
Tue Sep 13 01:45:48 CEST 2022


For experienced R developer like you, certain things might seem obvious 
without the need of any documentation.

But please understand that other languages do not have such requirements.
So for new people, or people coming from different languages, this might 
not seem as obvious as it is for you.

R already has a capability to do automated checking of packages to 
enforce certain level of quality.
 From this perspective, at least to me, it doesn't make sense that some 
issues are automatically flagged,
while other issues, which might be on the same or lower level of 
complexity, are not.
(also, packages are not journal articles)

Same with documentation, I can't spot and fix an issue, if I am not even 
aware that it is an issue.


 > If a user can't count on the interface for those functions remaining 
unchanged, why document it in a user-visible place?

Why not? Even unexported functions are user-visible through ::: . Since 
they are already documented, I might as well produce full documentation 
that is checked during `R CMD check`.
Isn't one of the R's advantage the ability to read code of any function 
without wading through the source files?

 > The fact that some base packages don't document this is a deficiency 
in that documentation, not an excuse for having a deficiency in your 
documentation.

That is good to know. I certainly know it now after having to fix this 
issue in my package. But how I am was supposed to know about it when 
this problem is not documented, `R CMD check` doesn't flag it, and 
official documentation uses it?


-- Jirka

On 9/13/22 11:19, Duncan Murdoch wrote:
> On 12/09/2022 6:42 p.m., Jiří Moravec wrote:
>> There are quite a lot of undocumented requirement for CRAN.
>> This bite me several times already.
>>
>> They are not documented in the
>> https://cran.r-project.org/doc/manuals/R-exts.html
>> Nor they are marked by `R CMD check`
>>
>> Ideally, these would be documented AND flagged by R CMD check.
>> Otherwise, it is a waste of time for both CRAN team and package 
>> developers.
>>
>> So far, the undocumented requirements that were flagged for me are:
>>
>> * Documenting return value even for functions without return value
>>     -- This is even contrary to the base code (i.e., many graphical
>> functions do not document return values)
>>
>> * Commented code in examples
>>
>> * Examples for non-exported internal functions
>>     -- I understand that this is related to the fact that any ::: is
>> highly discouraged (which is documented) and that examples for
>> unexported functions cannot be run without ::: .
>>        But I like the idea of using properly documented internal
>> functions and usage of examples as for rudimentary testing.
>>
>>
>> Are there any other undocumented requirements?
>
> Of course there are.  CRAN is not an automaton, it is a group of 
> people who review your submission.
>
> Your question is like asking whether there are any undocumented 
> requirements for acceptance of a paper in a journal.  Of course there 
> are!
>
> What you should do is aim for perfection in what you submit.  If you 
> can spot problems, fix them before you submit.  Documenting examples 
> is an obvious case where the example is likely to be improved with 
> better commenting.
>
> Example code for non-exported functions seems to miss the point. If a 
> user can't count on the interface for those functions remaining 
> unchanged, why document it in a user-visible place?  Put those kinds 
> of docs as comments in the source code.  Or if they can count on the 
> interface, then they should be exported functions.  You can test them 
> using ::: if you want tests.
>
> There are no functions without return values.  Sometimes the return 
> value is an invisible NULL, but there is always a return value.  The 
> fact that some base packages don't document this is a deficiency in 
> that documentation, not an excuse for having a deficiency in your 
> documentation.
>
> Duncan Murdoch



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