Jay,
You should use "RCMD install --build pkgName" to create the zip file
on
Windows. The zip files you see on CRAN are Windows binaries. You could
also used "RCMD build pkgName", but I remember seeing a post a while
back saying that using install instead of build was best (anyone - is
that true?).
See you next week in Groton,
Max
<snip>
Sorry, gmail seemed to have made an attachment out of my first attempted
post. Trying again:
------------------------------
At the encouragement of many at UseR, I'm trying to build my first real
package. I have no C/Fortran code, just plain old R code, so it should
be
rocket science. On a Linux box, I used package.skeleton() to create a
basic package containing just one "hello world" type of function. I
edited the DESCRIPTION file, changin the package name appropriately. I
edited the hello.Rd file. Upon running R CMD check hello, the only
warning had to do with the fact that src/ was empty (obviously I had no
source in such a simple package). I doubt this is a problem.
I was able to install and use the package successfully on the Linux
system
from the .tar.gz file, so far so good! Next, on to Windows, where the
problem arose:
I created a zip file from inside the package directory:
zip -r ../hello.zip ./*
When I moved this to my Windows machine and tried to install the package
using the GUI, I received the following error:
> utils:::menuInstallLocal()
Error in unpackPkg(pkgs[i], pkgnames[i], lib, installWithVers) :
malformed bundle DESCRIPTION file, no Contains field
I only found one mention of this in my Google search, with no reply to
the
thread. The Contains field appears to be used for bundles, but I'm
trying
to create a package, not a bundle. This leads me to believe that a
simple
zipping of the package directory structure is not the correct format for
Windows.
Needless to say, there appears to be wide agreement that making packages
requires precision, but fundamentally a package should (as described in
the
documentation) just be a collection of files and folders organized a
certain
way. If someone could point me to documentation I may have missed that
explains this, I would be grateful.
Regards,
Jay
--
John W. Emerson (Jay)
Assistant Professor of Statistics
Yale University
http://www.stat.yale.edu/~jay
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