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How to automatically load settings in R on OSX? How to find R_HOME, configure Rprofile.site, etc?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-17 07:12 出处:网络
I have a Macintosh and I am trying to automatically load packages, homemade functions, and use modified setting every time I start R. I believe this can be done with a file called Rprofile.site, and b

I have a Macintosh and I am trying to automatically load packages, homemade functions, and use modified setting every time I start R. I believe this can be done with a file called Rprofile.site, and by creating the functions .First and .Last in that file.

One problem is, I have no idea what my R_HOME directory is, what it is used for, or if it even exists. I found two functions that I thought both gave me its location but I am getting different results.

Here's the first

> Sys.getenv("R_home")
R_home 
    ""

And the second

> R.home()
[1] "开发者_开发问答/Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Resources"

As far as I can tell that second directory doesn't even exist on my machine. I am currently running R from my applications directory.


Over the years I have come to rely on the help(Startup) documentation as the best place to read up on this. There are numerous per-user and per-site configuration file as is customary for rich applications. It may seem like overkill at first but it is a really good system. And once you grok Renviron versus Renviron.site and dito for Rprofile, you appreciate the consistent behaviour across platforms.


Michael, I too have found this topic to be a bit confusing. I'm on a Mac as well. I created an "Rprofile" file which has all my customizations in it. Here's how mine works (I don't think there is anything special about my set up):

  1. The "Rprofile" goes in /Users/michael
  2. The "Rprofile" has to be composed of commands that R will understand (for instance, you can source it).
  3. The "Rprofile" has to be called .Rprofile The leading period means that the file is hidden from the normal operating system. You have to open a terminal window and do an >ls -la to see it (assuming you cd to that directory, if necessary). Plus you'll see lots of other hidden files. And it probably doesn't exist until you create it, next step.
  4. I use TextEdit to create a file called R.txt and put the commands in there (start simple for testing purposes).
  5. Then, in a terminal window, I type >cp R.txt .Rprofile which copies the visible R.txt to the invisible .Rprofile You can check by doing >ls -la again to see it in the directory listing.
  6. Restart R and see if it worked. For instance, if you put library(ggplot2) in your R.txt, that library should be loaded upon start up. If it doesn't, then a command from that library won't work, like qplot(x = 1:10, y = 1:10). Other people put in commands like cat("My .Rprofile works!\n) which should display during launching.

HTH Bryan


If you run getwd(), then you will see your R startup directory. On a mac it is typically /User/login_name That is where I leave my .RProfile where I load custom functions and also frequently used packages.

Also see: Useful little functions in R (to put in your .RProfile) and Expert R users, what's in your .Rprofile?…

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