I have a R program in a txt file say "functions.txt"
.
"functions.txt"
file the R using source("function.txt")
and then call functions f1()
, f2()
etc. which are declared and defined within
"function.txt"
file.
I also need to load a couple of R libraries using library()
before I can use f1()
, f2()
etc.
My question is can I acheive all this (i.e. calling function f1()
and f2()
) from the windows prompt without opening the R environment ?
So essentially I want to
- load the R libraries I need to run
f1()
,f2()
etc. - load the
function.txt
file - run the individual functions开发者_JAVA技巧 f1() etc.
- record the result
all from from the command promt of windows c:\>
I have windows version of R installed in my computers.
It would be very kind of anyone to give a detailed answer as I am not very computer savvy.Regards
Bart's post is correct, but this can be done simpler. If the code
f1 <- function() {
print("A")
}
f2 <- function() {
print("B")
}
f1()
f2()
is in a file 'myRcode.R'; then
Rscript myRcode.R
will load and execute it, including the two function calls.
Rscript.exe
is in the same directory as R.exe
-- which one may have to add to the $PATH
.
The following "works on my machine" (not Windows though, but it should...):
If your functions.txt
looks like:
f1 <- function()
{
print("A")
}
f2 <- function()
{
print("B")
}
the command:
Rscript -e "source('functions.txt');f1();f2()" > out.txt
should create the file out.txt
containing:
[1] "A"
[1] "B"
Here's a command line script, based on code above:
d:\misc2\bin\Rscript.exe d:\r_code\mycode.r
Using Windows 7, I ran it as a .bat file. Works fine. Thanks for the tip. (of course, these are just my particular subdirectories)
Add the R bin directory to PATH (windows Enviromwntal variables)
- This PC > Properties > Advanced system settings > Enviromental Variables > select Path > Edit > Add the path to R bin > save
Run command prompt, then you can use either the "R" command to start a new R session in cmd, or "Rscript" to run a script (file)
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