On Mon, 25 Feb 2002, Alexander Duering wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm trying to link a large in-house C++ library into R. So far,
I've managed to to most of what I want, but I have one remaining question
and a suggestion.
>
> The suggestion first: I've found it useful to put
>
> #ifdef __cplusplus
> extern "C" {
> #endif
>
> and
> #ifdef __cplusplus
> }
> #endif
>
> around the function prototypes in Rinternals.h (in /usr/local/lib/R/include
on my Red Hat 7.2 box) so my dynamic linker would no longer complain about
mangling-related undefined symbols. Also, I had to use #define USE_RINTERNALS
before including them in order to get a few macros I suppose are natural to use.
To be honest, I do think the include files could do with a bit of cleaning up,
in particular in view of linking in C++ code, but no complaints (I'm very
happy
to have R as it is).
Well, prior to R 1.4.1 Rinternals.h would not work with many C++ compilers,
and some changes were made because a package writer had assumed it would
(as it did with his version of g++, although not with mine nor with
Solaris' C++). Those blocks would indicate that we believed that
Rinternals.h was safe to use in C++ code, and at the last minor release
(1.4.0) it wasn't. It's under consideration for 1.5.0 if we can be sure
that it is now fully C++ compliant. The `Writing R Extensions' manual is
careful not to include Rinternals.h in the description of what headers can
be used with C++. One issue is that these headers get changed frequently,
and we need to be able to verify such claims automatically.
There is nothing to stop you making your own header which includes
Rinternals.h between those blocks of code, of course.
> My question is this: Our library makes extensive use of matrices of mixed
type, i.e., I would need to pass in and out objects that are logically of
rectangular structure, but some cells contain numbers, others strings.
I had initially hoped to be able to use data frames for that, but I realise
that columns have to be of identical mode. I could, if nothing else works,
use string matrices, but that would be very very unsatisfactory (and take
ages, because I'd have to check, and possibly convert, each matrix element).
Could somebody please suggest the 'natural' R data structure for this
kind of
object? I'm using cell arrays in Matlab and lists of lists in Perl for that
purpose, if it's any help.
A matrix list? R lists are just vectors with elements of different types,
and R matrices are just vectors with a dimension attribute.
--
Brian D. Ripley, ripley at stats.ox.ac.uk
Professor of Applied Statistics, http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~ripley/
University of Oxford, Tel: +44 1865 272861 (self)
1 South Parks Road, +44 1865 272860 (secr)
Oxford OX1 3TG, UK Fax: +44 1865 272595
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