I think I have a hole in my understanding of how R uses packages (or at least how it gives functions in packages priority). I thought I would give the new dplyr package a test drive this morning (which is blazingly fast BTW) and I've gone down the rabbit hole.
The issue is that I'm unable to use both plyr and dplyr in a program that I'm writing. When I initially install dplyr and I look at the summarise function everything works great but if I then install the plyr package the summarise function from dplyr is then masked with the plyr summarise function taking priority. I can't seem to figure out a way to get the dplyr summarise to become the main function... What am I missing here? Can you not use the dplyr and plyr packages at the same time? Example: ========================= > require(dplyr) Loading required package: dplyr Attaching package: 'dplyr' The following objects are masked from 'package:stats': filter, lag The following objects are masked from 'package:base': intersect, setdiff, setequal, union > summarise function (.data, ...) UseMethod("summarise") <environment: namespace:dplyr> > ======================= ***However, if I then install plyr I get what is below and masks the dplyr summarise function:** > require(plyr) Loading required package: plyr Attaching package: 'plyr' The following objects are masked from 'package:dplyr': arrange, desc, failwith, id, mutate, summarise > summarise function (.data, ...) { stopifnot(is.data.frame(.data) || is.list(.data) || is.environment(.data)) .... ...} <environment: namespace:plyr> > =============== ** Then no going back... require(dplyr) > summarise function (.data, ...) { stopifnot(is.data.frame(.data) || is.list(.data) || is.environment(.data)) .... ...} <environment: namespace:plyr> > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.