Hi everyone,

first of all, my sincerest thanks for the maintainers of this massive project. 
Such a compelling task!

Briefly, I’m a PhD student working on Spatial Stats who loves R. Last week I 
decided to install and use Ubuntu (again). Consequently, I install the latest 
release (18.04) and tried to install R 3.5.0 as well but (un)fortunately I 
couldn’t.

I have used R within Ubuntu and I use to follow the installation procedure 
suggested in the R-project website. However, this time was a bit different. I 
realised I was missing a key fact. There’s plenty of work behind making 
available R packages for Ubuntu! It briefly showed up in front of my eyes the 
meaning of each installation step. That’s why I’m here. So I would really 
appreciate you to enlighten me with your knowledge. I really want to go in 
depth on the relationship R-Ubuntu. Btw, any resource for learning is more than 
welcome.

In this sense, which is the meaning of starting to install R by adding

deb https://www.stats.bris.ac.uk/R/bin/linux/ubuntu 
bionic/<https://www.stats.bris.ac.uk/R/bin/linux/ubuntu%20bionic/>

in the source.list file?

I realised that I’m able to compile

sudo apt-get install r-base

without doing the first step. Which is the difference between each one?

Now that I’m more aware I know that it isn’t so straightforward to mirror to 
CRAN and I have to hold my horses a bit more jeje. So should I install previous 
of both R and Ubuntu? I mean, does it take a long time to have a mirrored 
version?


Best,
Roman.


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