source {base} | R Documentation |
source
causes R to accept its input from the named file or URL
or connection. Input is read and parse
d from that file
until the end of the file is reached, then the parsed expressions are
evaluated sequentially in the chosen environment.
source(file, local = FALSE, echo = verbose, print.eval = echo, verbose = getOption("verbose"), prompt.echo = getOption("prompt"), max.deparse.length = 150, chdir = FALSE, encoding = getOption("encoding"), continue.echo = getOption("continue"), skip.echo = 0, keep.source = getOption("keep.source"))
file |
a connection or a character string giving the pathname
of the file or URL to read from. |
local |
|
echo |
logical; if |
print.eval |
logical; if |
verbose |
if |
prompt.echo |
character; gives the prompt to be used if
|
max.deparse.length |
integer; is used only if |
chdir |
logical; if |
encoding |
character vector. The encoding(s) to be assumed when
|
continue.echo |
character; gives the prompt to use on
continuation lines if |
skip.echo |
integer; how many comment lines at the start of the
file to skip if |
keep.source |
logical: should the source formatting be retained when echoing expressions, if possible? |
Note that running code via source
differs in a few respects
from entering it at the R command line. Since expressions are not
executed at the top level, auto-printing is not done. So you will
need to include explicit print
calls for things you want to be
printed (and remember that this includes plotting by lattice,
FAQ Q7.22). Since the complete file is parsed before any of it is
run, syntax errors result in none of the code being run. If an error
occurs in running a syntactically correct script, anything assigned
into the workspace by code that has been run will be kept (just as
from the command line), but diagnostic information such as
traceback()
will contain additional calls to
withVisible
.
All versions of R accept input from a connection with end of line marked by LF (as used on Unix), CRLF (as used on DOS/Windows) or CR (as used on classic Mac OS) and map this to newline. The final line can be incomplete, that is missing the final end-of-line marker.
If keep.source
is true (the default in interactive use), the
source of functions is kept so they can be listed exactly as input.
Unlike input from a console, lines in the file or on a connection can contain an unlimited number of characters.
When skip.echo > 0
, that many comment lines at the start of
the file will not be echoed. This does not affect the execution of
the code at all. If there are executable lines within the first
skip.echo
lines, echoing will start with the first of them.
If echo
is true and a deparsed expression exceeds
max.deparse.length
, that many characters are output followed by
.... [TRUNCATED]
.
By default the input is read and parsed in the current encoding of the R session. This is usually what it required, but occasionally re-encoding is needed, e.g. if a file from a UTF-8-using system is to be read on Windows (or vice versa).
The rest of this paragraph applies if file
is an actual
filename or URL (and not ""
nor a connection). If
encoding = "unknown"
, an attempt is made to guess the encoding:
the result of localeToCharset()
is used as a guide. If
encoding
has two or more elements, they are tried in turn until
the file/URL can be read without error in the trial encoding. If an
actual encoding
is specified (rather than the default or
"unknown"
) in a Latin-1 or UTF-8 locale then character strings
in the result will be translated to the current encoding and marked as
such (see Encoding
).
If file
is a connection (including one specified by ""
,
it is not possible to re-encode the input inside source
, and so
the encoding
argument is just used to mark character strings in the
parsed input in Latin-1 and UTF-8 locales: see parse
.
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
demo
which uses source
;
eval
, parse
and scan
;
options("keep.source")
.
sys.source
which is a streamlined version to source a
file into an environment.
‘The R Language Definition’ for a discussion of source directives.
## If you want to source() a bunch of files, something like ## the following may be useful: sourceDir <- function(path, trace = TRUE, ...) { for (nm in list.files(path, pattern = "\\.[RrSsQq]$")) { if(trace) cat(nm,":") source(file.path(path, nm), ...) if(trace) cat("\n") } }