Adam, [I'm moving this discussion to stat-rosuda-devel, because JRI is strictly speaking a contributed package]
On Jul 13, 2006, at 5:28 PM, Adam Kapelner wrote: > It worked. All I had to do is set PATH = < R directory > in my > system variables in "My Computer" and that was it! > > Oh btw Simon, I couldn't find the run.bat in the JRI_0.2-4.tar.gz > file. I found a "run.in" but that is a unix bash script. > run (and run.bat respectively) are created by make, so you should run "sh configure.win; make" on Windows or "./configure; make" on unix. The script must contain paths to your JRE and R, so it cannot be shipped directly in JRI - that's why it is created during the build phase instead. > Another question: > > When I'm evaluating R expressions: > REXP > rexp3=r.eval("cancer=read.table(\"CancerCellsTrainingFile.txt > \",header=TRUE, > sep=\",\")"); > System.out.println(rexp3); > > I sometimes get back form the println: > RXP[unknown/19, id=1208787616, o=null] > > Is there anyway to actually view that output as a string? It is a generic vector (aka list). If you use JRI 0.3 (from http:// www.rosuda.org/R/nightly ), you can use RVector v=rexp3.asVector() for (Enumeration e = v.elements() ; e.hasMoreElements() ;) System.out.println(e.nextElement()); If you are using JRI 0.2 or earlier, you'll have to use something like this: long[] l = r.rniGetVector(rexp3.xp); int i=0; while(i<l.length) System.out.println(new REXP(r, l[i++])); Cheers, Simon ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel