Learn R Programming

drake (version 7.5.2)

file_store: Tell drake that you want information on a file (target or import), not an ordinary object.

Description

This function simply wraps literal double quotes around the argument x so drake knows it is the name of a file. Use when you are calling functions like deps_code(): for example, deps_code(file_store("report.md")). See the examples for details. Internally, drake wraps the names of file targets/imports inside literal double quotes to avoid confusion between files and generic R objects.

Usage

file_store(x)

Arguments

x

Character string to be turned into a filename understandable by drake (i.e., a string with literal single quotes on both ends).

Value

A single-quoted character string: i.e., a filename understandable by drake.

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
# Wraps the string in single quotes.
file_store("my_file.rds") # "'my_file.rds'"
# }
# NOT RUN {
isolate_example("contain side effects", {
if (suppressWarnings(require("knitr"))) {
load_mtcars_example() # Get the code with drake_example("mtcars").
make(my_plan) # Run the workflow to build the targets
list.files() # Should include input "report.Rmd" and output "report.md".
head(readd(small)) # You can use symbols for ordinary objects.
# But if you want to read cached info on files, use `file_store()`.
readd(file_store("report.md"), character_only = TRUE) # File fingerprint.
deps_code(file_store("report.Rmd"))
config <- drake_config(my_plan)
deps_profile(
  file_store("report.Rmd"),
  config = config,
  character_only = TRUE
)
}
})
# }

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab