Learn R Programming

base (version 3.2.2)

interactive: Is R Running Interactively?

Description

Return TRUE when R is being used interactively and FALSE otherwise.

Usage

interactive()

Arguments

Details

An interactive R session is one in which it is assumed that there is a human operator to interact with, so for example R can prompt for corrections to incorrect input or ask what to do next or if it is OK to move to the next plot.

GUI consoles will arrange to start R in an interactive session. When R is run in a terminal (via Rterm.exe on Windows), it assumes that it is interactive if ‘stdin’ is connected to a (pseudo-)terminal and not if ‘stdin’ is redirected to a file or pipe. Command-line options --interactive (Unix) and --ess (Windows, Rterm.exe) override the default assumption. unix (On a Unix-alike, whether the readline command-line editor is used is not overridden by --interactive.)

Embedded uses of R can set a session to be interactive or not.

Internally, whether a session is interactive determines

  • how some errors are handled and reported, e.g.\ifelse{latex}{\out{~}}{ } see stop and options("showWarnCalls").

  • whether one of --save, --no-save or --vanilla is required, and if R ever asks whether to save the workspace.
  • the choice of default graphics device launched when needed and by dev.new: see options("device")
  • whether graphics devices ever ask for confirmation of a new page.
  • In addition, R's own R code makes use of interactive(): for example help, debugger and install.packages do.

    See Also

    source, .First

    Examples

    Run this code
     .First <- function() if(interactive()) x11()
    

    Run the code above in your browser using DataLab