If you want to avoid typing, why not just use a shell that offers file-name
completion? Lots do. That would seem to address the problem in the place
where it arises.
I don't think it would be a good idea to make R try to guess whether it
really should use the second argument after BATCH as an output file. This
type of complication can have unintended and unanticipated side effects --
"Do What I Mean" programming tools have not been a huge success
because
it's impossible to always accurately guess what a person means. I don't
know about other people, but I use scripts to generate scripts all the time
(for generating commands to run experiments with different sets of parameters).
-- Tony Plate
At Tuesday 03:32 PM 11/16/2004, Douglas Grove wrote:>Hi,
>
>I'm having a problem (of my own creation) with BATCH.
>
>The current problem (for me):
>----------------------------
>I'm sloppy. I work on *nux systems and will type e.g. "R CMD BATCH
a*R out"
>to avoid typing the full name of some R script of mine. However,
>sometimes I'm overly sloppy and there are multiple files that match
>"a*R", so "a*R" turns into e.g. "aa.R ab.R",
and the arguments to
>BATCH will be "aa.R ab.R out". BATCH will use aa.R as the input
file and
>ab.R as the output file, leading to my script ab.R being overwritten.
>I then have to plead to my sysadm to restore the file for me.
>
>I've done this often enough that I need to make a modification to BATCH,
>and was wondering if anything can be done about this that can be used
>generally. In other words, is there a fix to my problem that would be
>usable in general and won't mess up something else?
>
>
>Solutions:
>-----------
>A simple solution to this problem is to print a message and exit when
>more than 2 arguments are found. While I don't know why offhand,
there's
>probably a reason why people would like to pass extra arguments and have
>them ignored by BATCH. If so, this won't work in general.
>
>Something more intelligent would be to examine the first two arguments
>and if they both end in .R then issue a message and exit. I would think
>create fewer problems. I don't think many people are using R scripts to
>create other R scripts, and if they are they can always rename them after
>they create them.
>
>I'm just going to go for the simple solution for now, but wanted to toss
>this issue out in case it might be something that could be integrated
>into the official BATCH script.
>
>Thanks,
>
>Doug Grove
>Statistical Research Associate
>Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
>Seattle, WA
>
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