Hi Rick,
> learning R. A question to this end, though.
> Would all of my existing S-Plus arrays, functions,
> and so on have to be re-created from scratch in R,
> or is there a way to copy them into the .RData
> directory? The answer to this question has major
I am not sure if you have had this answered already. You definitely cannot
just copy the binary objects into a .RData workspace. On the S-PLUS side, I
would try
?data.dump (and particularly, its argument oldStyle if you have S3/S-PLUS
2000 or earlier objects), and/or ?dput to get your S-PLUS objects exported
to ASCII format.
Then from the R side, see ?source and ?dget to import things into R objects.
I do not recall off-hand what the best combinations and argument settings
are for the most common situations. But I recall the reliability being
pretty high in my practice if not perfect, which is more than I could ask
for.
I'd also like to suggest that if you do not already, you might want to make
a habit to use and keep files of source code with objects that you create,
especially functions and calls to create data.frames, etc.... As wonderful
as R is, I find S-PLUS is still needed a lot in my work, so when you need to
work with both, having a file of the source commands is most convenient
(actually, I personally find it absolutely essential).
Hope that helps.
Bill
---------------------------------------
Bill Pikounis, Ph.D.
Biometrics Research Department
Merck Research Laboratories
PO Box 2000, MailDrop RY33-300
126 E. Lincoln Avenue
Rahway, New Jersey 07065-0900
USA
Phone: 732 594 3913
Fax: 732 594 1565
> -----Original Message-----
> From: r-help-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch
> [mailto:r-help-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch] On Behalf Of Rick Picard
> Sent: Wednesday, June 09, 2004 12:58 PM
> To: r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch
> Subject: [R] question related to S-Plus
>
>
> Dear r-help,
> Having used S-Plus for many years, it has
> been suggested to me that I could benefit from
> learning R. A question to this end, though.
> Would all of my existing S-Plus arrays, functions,
> and so on have to be re-created from scratch in R,
> or is there a way to copy them into the .Rdata
> directory? The answer to this question has major
> implications for the extent to which R is attractive
> in the near term, and any enlightenment would be
> much appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
> Rick Picard
>
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