I upgraded R on windows xp from 2.12.2 to 2.13.1 and now I can not process Rnw files with windows cp1250 encoding. Sweave complains: file.Rnw declares an encoding that Sweave does not know about What can I do beside downgrade R? When will Sweave support more encodings? Has anybody found a solution? Regards, Tomaz
Prof Brian Ripley
2011-Jul-11 14:06 UTC
[R] Sweave in R 2.13.1 doesn't support cp1250 encoding
On Mon, 11 Jul 2011, Tomaz wrote:> I upgraded R on windows xp from 2.12.2 to 2.13.1 and now I can not process Rnw > files with windows cp1250 encoding. Sweave complains:Which is of course not an ISO Standard encoding. One way out is to use the ISO encoding latin2, which is supported.> file.Rnw declares an encoding that Sweave does not know about > > What can I do beside downgrade R? When will Sweave support more encodings? > Has anybody found a solution?It is a great pity that you did not raise this during the alpha/beta/RC period of R 2.13.0, and that you did not give the 'at a minimum' information asked for in the posting guide so we do not know your locale. Nor do we have the 'commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible' example we asked for. These things happen because of lack of cooperation from users with unusual requirements. Note that in several months no one else has reported a need for cp1250. The short answer is that now 2.13.1 was missed, it will be 2.14.0 and 2.13.1 patched: please do try a version of the latter dated tomorrow or later (r56361 or later) since there is no way we can test if the change made is adequate without your example. Next time you wish to request an enhancement to R for an very unusual usage case, please write to R-devel with full details and an example. Very much preferably, do so during the pre-release testing period.> > Regards, > Tomaz > > ______________________________________________ > R-help at r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help > PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >-- 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 272866 (PA) Oxford OX1 3TG, UK Fax: +44 1865 272595