[R] R Function Guide

Chris Marshall chrism at norcomnetworks.com
Wed Jun 6 16:11:04 CEST 2001


Strange as it may seem, I've been digging into R a lot these last few months
and, although I was aware of help.start(), I hadn't ever tried the search
link.

That is a very nice feature.

I humbly suggest that section 1.7 in the R Intro have a line added that goes
something like this:

"The 'Search Engine and Keywords' link in the page loaded by help.start() is
particularly useful as it is contains a high-level concept list which
searches though available functions.  It can be a great way to get you
bearings quickly and to understand the breadth of what R has to offer."

Chris Marshall

-----Original Message-----
From: Uwe Ligges
To: freud at starpower.net
Cc: R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch
Sent: 6/6/01 2:14 AM
Subject: Re: [R] R Function Guide



freud at starpower.net wrote:
> 
> I was wondering if there was anything for R like the function guide
> provided by insightful for S-Plus at the url below:
> 
> http://www.insightful.com/resources/fguide.html
> 
> What makes if particularly appealing is the organization of
> functions by class.
> 
> If there is not something like this for R, I think it would be a great
> addition to the R documentation.  It would provide an easy way to
> identify an available function for a particular category of analysis
> and thus facilitate viewing the help pages for the appropriate
> function or functions--particularly if this were available for not
just
> base packages, but contributed packages as well.  Personally, I
> find the biggest weakness of the current help system is the fact
> that I must know the name of a function in advance to request help
> on some analysis or proceedure.  Would be nice to start with a
> general idea, category, class, or set of proceedures and move to a
> list of related functions.
> 
> Extending the original idea, wouldn't it be great if there were a list
> as described above that, in addition to listing functions by
> category, also provided package information, availability, version,
> etc for the listed functions.
> 
> I recognize that there is probably some overlap with the S-Plus
> guide, and that it in itself is probably a good reference, or at least
a
> nice starting point for a simliar R guide.  However, I also suspect
> that quite a lot of the S-Plus functionality listed is not yet
> implemented in R.  Perhaps I am wrong.

Use help.start() and go to "Search Engine & Keywords".

Uwe Ligges
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