No no, thank you for helping
To clarify, I am not out to "fix" or "change" anything, or report
bugs, I
just want to understand how to efficiently use R.app, my problems are
1-on my systems (one 32 and one 64), Rhistory "forgets" commands
which is
how this all started, and
2-I find the Startup Preferences confusing
Ok, Rdata: several explained that in the workspace, a new object "x"
will
overwrite an old object "x" without warning, by keeping Rdata's
separate one
can use "x" many times for different things, I have always manually
saved
important Rdata's and ignored the default Rdata, but I can change,
or do
both now that I understand
Now Directory in Preferences: I have checked Always apply and the
directory
is ~; the notes say dd of directory will override if not enforced;
but if I
dd a folder onto R, the working directory is not ~ but rather the
one dd'd
onto R, so does not seem "Always apply" is working
Now Rhistory: again the problem is Rhistory forgets commands on my
system,
which is why I got into this, but then I find Rhistory(s) all over
in Prefs I have checked Read on startup and the history file is
~/.Rhistory
(return saves that value, thank you again, this might be in the
notes) and I
checked Cleanup history.
It appears that if I work in some directory and then quit w save, the
history is written to both ~/.Rhistory and the directory. So I had 33
.Rhistory(s) on the drive even tho I told R.app to use one.
So I tried your second idea, changed the R.app history name
to .xxxRhistory
and voila, ".xxxRhistory" appears where R.app Preferences say and
".Rhistory" appears in the working directory, so would appear you are
correct; R.app is writing out .xxxRhistory and somebody else is
writing
.Rhistory
Now if I work in the default directory AND have R.app set to write
.xxxRhistory AND quit/save, I again find in the directory
both .xxxRhistory
and .Rhistory, so you are again correct; R.app writes .xxxRhistory and
somebody else writes .Rhistory
And the .Rhistory file is written about 4 sec after the .xxxRhistory
file
and the .Rhistory file is 0kb
So then your third idea might be correct; ie if R.app
writes .Rhistory it is
overwritten by the second writing of .Rhistory and if the
second .Rhistory
is missing commands, then it would appear that R.app is forgetting
commands
In sum
1-is it possible that .Rhistory from R overwrites .Rhistory from
R.app and
the history that R uses is incomplete so commands are "forgotten"
2-and of course what is the work around for #2
3-and lesser, what does "Always apply" do for the directory
From: Rob Goedman <robjgoed...@me.com>
Date: Tue, 05 May 2009 21:34:16 -0700
To: Loren Engrav <eng...@u.washington.edu>
Cc: "r-sig-mac@stat.math.ethz.ch" <r-sig-mac@stat.math.ethz.ch>
Subject: Re: [R-SIG-Mac] R.app history forgets
Loren,
Please find my comments inserted below. Thank you for being
persistent!
On May 5, 2009, at 4:13 PM, Loren Engrav wrote:
Ok, so Rdata goes to the directory one is working in; and so will
have
Rdata's in many folders which seems strange
As a counter example, I work on 5 or 6 different projects
simultaneously,
each in its own directory sub tree. Several of the projects need to
store the
workspace after I'm done. This is implemented as the default
mechanism.
Through the .Last mechanism you can get your desired behavior. But
unfortunately, it will take some extra work to define the .Last
function.
That should take care of many .RData's.
As for Rhistory if one declines to save workspace, Rhistory is
written to
the directory specified; if one saves workspace Rhistory is written
to both
the directory specified and the workspace directory, ie to both;
this also
seems strange.
Could it be R, not R.app that creates the .Rhistory file if the
workspace is
saved????? I am not aware of this behavior (the fact that R creates a
history file when asked to save the workspace), or simply might have
missed it if it was introduced in the 4 or 5 years since I worked
on the
history mechanism for R.app.
And the troubled history is attached
This seems problematic; not knowing where these files are going and
winding
up with many; and then the forgetful Rhistory as well
And indeed, in that case, if the name of the history file set in the
R.app
preferences is the same as R's default name (.Rhistory) ***and*** the
workspace is saved, the history file seems to forget recent commands
because R.app writes its history file which is subsequently
overwitten
by R.
Maybe someone familiar with the R source can confirm this behavior, I
have
rarely looked at the R source, just at the R.app code.
Rob
Thank you
From: Rob Goedman <robjgoed...@me.com>
Date: Tue, 05 May 2009 12:20:51 -0700
To: Loren Engrav <eng...@u.washington.edu>
Cc: "r-sig-mac@stat.math.ethz.ch" <r-sig-mac@stat.math.ethz.ch>
Subject: Re: [R-SIG-Mac] R.app history forgets
Loren,
Thanks for the screen shot.
A bit more experimentation and a quick look at the code refreshed
my
memory.
If you exit R, .RData is always written to the directory you are
in.
In your setting, on q() to quit, R.app should ask for
conformation to
save the workspace.
If you don't change your directory it should create a .RData in
your
home directory (that's where your R.app started).
Preferences do not provide help here, but you could create a .Last
function with a save.image() command in it to force storing
the .RData
file to a fixed directory. In that case you can opt to set the Quit
preferences to 'No' (don't ask me to store the workspace).
For history its a (tiny) bit more flexible. By selecting an
absolute
path, like you have in your setting, it will always store the
current
available history commands in that file (including the ones that
were
read in during startup, so the new commands are at the end of the
file).
If this does not work for you, can you send me your ~/.Rhistory
file
after executing a last new command in R.app, maybe something like
'testHist <- 1' and quitting R.app?
As you found in the archives, a few folks did have trouble (usually
because R.app could not write to the selected directory).
After this email it might be better to take this discussion off-
line.
Regards,
Rob
On May 5, 2009, at 11:50 AM, Loren Engrav wrote:
Thank you
attached
From: Rob Goedman <robjgoed...@me.com>
Date: Tue, 05 May 2009 11:36:25 -0700
To: Loren Engrav <eng...@u.washington.edu>
Cc: "r-sig-mac@stat.math.ethz.ch" <r-sig-mac@stat.math.ethz.ch>
Subject: Re: [R-SIG-Mac] R.app history forgets
Loren,
Can you send me a screen copy of the Startup preferences ( with
the
cursor inside the Startup Preferences window, press Command-
Shift-4,
followed by pressing the spacebar, followed by a click of the
mouse
button, this should write it to your Deskop as 'Picture 1').
Rob
On May 5, 2009, at 11:24 AM, Loren Engrav wrote:
Mac OS 10.5.5 and R.app 2.9.0
I start up, run a few things, and quit (w or wo save) and no
directory
changes
Then I restart and the recent commands are no longer in Rhistory
The only box I have checked in History preferences is Read on
Startup and I
have max entries set to 5000
I see queries about this before but I could find no solution
Thank you
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On May 5, 2009, at 9:37 AM, Loren Engrav wrote:
Thank you
The return before clicking anywhere else solved that problem,
clever
So I trash all invisible .Rhistory and .Rdata files
Then made a new folder (called R_History_Data) and aim Preferences
at this
folder (using the return)
Then run R.app and yes, I have one .Rhistory and one .Rdata in
that
folder
But then I change the working directory and do some stuff
Then quit and save working directory
And now I have two of each invisible files, one in R_History_Data
and one in
the working directory folder
So it still appears as I move from directory to directory I will
leave
invisible .Rhistory and .Rdata files all over
Is it possible to have Rhistory and Rdata always written to the
R_History_Data folder?
<TroubledHistory.history>