Morning all o/ . I been up all night writing an instruction guide for my student on how to upgrade R as I mentioned before. (tired =.=;; ) Kind of reached a predictable road block. Here are the two sections I need advice on: goo.gl/HpgFnr and goo.gl/MKhYy8
Does anyone again have advice on the best way to "preserve the already installed packages" when updating R? (I provided a few ideas, but I don't know which one would be the most useful and easy to use)
@par hmm... really? 20 Gb and a 3 Gb data.frame? Just out of curiosity are you using any of the Big Data memory saving techniques like data.table, the 3.3.3 version of dplyr, or BigMemory? Or any other big data techniques? :3
@NabiShaikh I am still trying to figure out the basics of Rshiny myself. Hopefully though someone in chat knows or alternative you could make a thread about it perhaps?
Also ... its time like these I wish I knew how to contribute to peoples answers or write new good comments. For example, stackoverflow.com/a/17625368/7190837 ... is pretty good, but one could add that that the folder that R stores files on Windows is now "R\win-library\x.y" or "R\win64-library\x.y".
@mlane tbh, i have no idea why there are any answers beyond the accepted one by agstudy. i've never had any problem with rstudio latching onto my r installation, which is itself simple to update
@Frank Its probably mostly due to people wanting to preserve their packages with the new r installation. Its because most people are very poor organizers. When you working on a project with 50 or more packages, carry over is useful. However, you raise a good point, so after lunch I am going write a shorter R installation version by combining @agstudy suggestion of the install (uninstall) with RyanStochastic method of carrying over packages.
i don't really use many packages. the real annoyance for me -- without fail -- is the need to update rtools and then engage in manual fiddling in its config files (on windows, i mean)
@mlane I understand people may want an easy way to install packages, but I make it a point to upgrade packages and perhaps revise if I need all of them. I upgrade R about twice a year and installing a few dozen packages "as I go" doesn't seem something worth inventing a new workflow for.