dput {base} | R Documentation |
Writes an ASCII text representation of an R object to a file or connection, or uses one to recreate the object.
dput(x, file = "", control = c("keepNA", "keepInteger", "showAttributes")) dget(file)
x |
an object. |
file |
either a character string naming a file or a
connection. |
control |
character vector indicating deparsing options.
See |
dput
opens file
and deparses the object x
into
that file. The object name is not written (unlike dump
).
If x
is a function the associated environment is stripped.
Hence scoping information can be lost.
Deparsing an object is difficult, and not always possible. With the
default control
, dput()
attempts to deparse in a way
that is readable, but for more complex or unusual objects (see
dump
, not likely
to be parsed as identical to the original. Use control = "all"
for the most complete deparsing; use control = NULL
for the
simplest deparsing, not even including attributes.
dput
will warn if fewer characters were written to a file than
expected, which may indicate a full or corrupt file system.
To display saved source rather than deparsing the internal representation
include "useSource"
in control
. R currently saves
source only for function definitions.
For dput
, the first argument invisibly.
For dget
, the object created.
To avoid the risk of a source attribute out of sync with the actual function definition, the source attribute of a function will never be written as an attribute.
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
## Write an ASCII version of mean to the file "foo" dput(mean, "foo") ## And read it back into 'bar' bar <- dget("foo") unlink("foo") ## Create a function with comments baz <- function(x) { # Subtract from one 1-x } ## and display it dput(baz) ## and now display the saved source dput(baz, control = "useSource")