Learn R Programming

utils (version 3.6.0)

example: Run an Examples Section from the Online Help

Description

Run all the R code from the Examples part of R's online help topic topic with possible exceptions dontrun, dontshow, and donttest, see ‘Details’ below.

Usage

example(topic, package = NULL, lib.loc = NULL,
        character.only = FALSE, give.lines = FALSE, local = FALSE,
        echo = TRUE, verbose = getOption("verbose"),
        setRNG = FALSE, ask = getOption("example.ask"),
        prompt.prefix = abbreviate(topic, 6),
        run.dontrun = FALSE, run.donttest = interactive())

Arguments

topic

name or literal character string: the online help topic the examples of which should be run.

package

a character vector giving the package names to look into for the topic, or NULL (the default), when all packages on the search path are used.

lib.loc

a character vector of directory names of R libraries, or NULL. The default value of NULL corresponds to all libraries currently known. If the default is used, the loaded packages are searched before the libraries.

character.only

a logical indicating whether topic can be assumed to be a character string.

give.lines

logical: if true, the lines of the example source code are returned as a character vector.

local

logical: if TRUE evaluate locally, if FALSE evaluate in the workspace.

echo

logical; if TRUE, show the R input when sourcing.

verbose

logical; if TRUE, show even more when running example code.

setRNG

logical or expression; if not FALSE, the random number generator state is saved, then initialized to a specified state, the example is run and the (saved) state is restored. setRNG = TRUE sets the same state as R CMD check does for running a package's examples. This is currently equivalent to setRNG = {RNGkind("default", "default", "default"); set.seed(1)}.

ask

logical (or "default") indicating if devAskNewPage(ask = TRUE) should be called before graphical output happens from the example code. The value "default" (the factory-fresh default) means to ask if echo == TRUE and the graphics device appears to be interactive. This parameter applies both to any currently opened device and to any devices opened by the example code.

prompt.prefix

character; prefixes the prompt to be used if echo = TRUE.

run.dontrun

logical indicating that \dontrun should be ignored.

run.donttest

logical indicating that \donttest should be ignored.

Value

The value of the last evaluated expression, unless give.lines is true, where a character vector is returned.

Details

If lib.loc is not specified, the packages are searched for amongst those already loaded, then in the libraries given by .libPaths(). If lib.loc is specified, packages are searched for only in the specified libraries, even if they are already loaded from another library. The search stops at the first package found that has help on the topic.

An attempt is made to load the package before running the examples, but this will not replace a package loaded from another location.

If local = TRUE objects are not created in the workspace and so not available for examination after example completes: on the other hand they cannot overwrite objects of the same name in the workspace.

As detailed in the manual Writing R Extensions, the author of the help page can markup parts of the examples for exception rules

dontrun

encloses code that should not be run.

dontshow

encloses code that is invisible on help pages, but will be run both by the package checking tools, and the example() function. This was previously testonly, and that form is still accepted.

donttest

encloses code that typically should be run, but not during package checking. The default run.donttest = interactive() leads example() use in other help page examples to skip \donttest sections appropriately.

See Also

demo

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
example(InsectSprays)
## force use of the standard package 'stats':
example("smooth", package = "stats", lib.loc = .Library)

## set RNG *before* example as when R CMD check is run:

r1 <- example(quantile, setRNG = TRUE)
x1 <- rnorm(1)
u <- runif(1)
## identical random numbers
r2 <- example(quantile, setRNG = TRUE)
x2 <- rnorm(1)
stopifnot(identical(r1, r2))
## but x1 and x2 differ since the RNG state from before example()
## differs and is restored!
x1; x2

## Exploring examples code:
## How large are the examples of "lm...()" functions?
lmex <- sapply(apropos("^lm", mode = "function"),
               example, character.only = TRUE, give.lines = TRUE)
sapply(lmex, length)
# }

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