Rscript --help
gives details of usage, and
Rscript --version
gives the version of Rscript
.
Other invocations invoke the R front-end with selected options. This
front-end is convenient for writing #! scripts since it is an
executable and takes file
directly as an argument. Options
--slave --no-restore are always supplied: these imply
--no-save. Arguments that contain spaces cannot be specified
directly on the #! line, because spaces and tabs are interpreted as
delimiters and there is no way to protect them from this interpretation on
the #! line. (The standard Windows command line has no concept
of #! scripts, but Cygwin shells do.)
Either one or more -e options or file
should
be supplied. When using -e options be aware of the quoting
rules in the shell used: see the examples.
Additional options accepted (before file
or args
) are
- --verbose
gives details of what Rscript
is
doing. Also passed on to R.
- --default-packages=list
where list
is a
comma-separated list of package names or NULL
. Sets the
environment variable R_DEFAULT_PACKAGES
which determines the
packages loaded on startup.
Spaces are allowed in expression
and file
(but will need
to be protected from the shell in use, if any, for example by
enclosing the argument in quotes).
If --default-packages is not used, then Rscript
checks the environment variable R_SCRIPT_DEFAULT_PACKAGES
. If
this is set, then it takes precedence over R_DEFAULT_PACKAGES
.
Normally the version of R is determined at installation, but this can
be overridden by setting the environment variable RHOME
.
The R files are found from the location of the Rscript.exe
executable. If this is copied elsewhere, the environment variable
RHOME
should be set to the top directory of the R installation.
Unlike Unix-alikes, this links directly to R.dll
rather than
running a separate process.
stdin()
refers to the input file, and
file("stdin")
to the stdin
file stream of the
process.