Bryan Hanson
2016-Dec-27 15:00 UTC
[Rd] Proper attribution in Authors@R for the d3.js library by Mike Bostock
I have a couple of packages that use the d3.js library developed (and copyrighted) by Mike Bostock. One package uses it extensively, another only for one function. I use R to piece together parts files containing JavaScript that I have written, which use d3.js functions and eventually the d3 library is called from a temporary web page. To date, I have pointed to Bostock's library in the Rd files. However, there are a growing number of packages that use d3.js now, and the habit (standard?) now seems to be to put Bostock in Authors at R, but they do so in different ways. Here are a few examples: D3partitionR: Mike Bostock [aut, cph] (d3.js library in htmlwidgets/lib, http://d3js.org. The partitionChart, sunburst, the treemap, the zoomable circlePacking, the collapsible indented tree and the collapsible tree are all derived from his works.) scatterD3: Mike Bostock [aut, cph] (d3.js library, http://d3js.org) qrage: Michael Bostock [ctb, cph] (D3.js library) And there are others. ?person offers the following options that seem relevant: "aut" (Author) Use for full authors who have made substantial contributions to the package and should show up in the package citation. "com" (Compiler) Use for persons who collected code (potentially in other languages) but did not make further substantial contributions to the package. "ctb" (Contributor) Use for authors who have made smaller contributions (such as code patches etc.) but should not show up in the package citation. "cph" (Copyright holder) Use for all copyright holders. Questions: What is the proper attribution in this case? Bostock is clearly cph. Is that sufficient? I'm not completely certain about the intentions of "com" but it may fit. "ctb" sounds insufficient and "aut" seems to be a bit much (can you be an author of an R package and not know about it?). Is there a CRAN policy about this? Thanks for any thoughts and guidance. Bryan **************** Prof. Bryan Hanson Dept of Chemistry & Biochemistry DePauw University Greencastle IN 46135 USA academic.depauw.edu/~hanson/index.html github.com/bryanhanson