On 27/01/2021 3:38 a.m., Martin Maechler wrote:
Martin Maechler
on Tue, 26 Jan 2021 12:37:58 +0100 writes:
Marcel Baumgartner
on Tue, 26 Jan 2021 08:55:48 +0100 writes:
>> Dear all, my colleague posted our issue on stackoverflow:
>> Calling R script from Python does not save log file in
>> version 4 - Stack Overflow
>>
[https://stackoverflow.com/questions/65887485/calling-r-script-from-python-does-not-save-log-file-in-version-4]
>> It is about this kind of call to R:
>> R.exe -f code.R --args "~/file.txt" 1> "~/log.txt" 2>&1".
>> The issue is that the log.txt file is not created when
>> running R 4.x.x. The same code works perfectly fine with
>> R 3.6.x.
>> Any idea what's going wrong as of version 4? Regards
>> Marcel
> Dear Marcel, I think the solution is embarrassingly
> simple:
>> From the SO post, where she showed a bit more detail than you
> show here, it's clear you have confused 'R.exe' and
> 'Rscript.exe' and what you say above is not true:
> 'R.exe' was used for R 3.6.0 but for R 4.0.3, you/she used
> 'Rscript.exe' instead.
> ... as you've noticed now, they do behave differently,
> indeed!
Well, this was not the solution to their -- Windows-only -- problem.
The problem *is* indeed visible if they only use R.exe (also
for R 4.0.3).
I've commented more on the SO issue (see above),
notably asking for a *minimal* repr.ex. (reproducible example),
and one *not* using "<YOUR PATH>" and setwd() ..
Isn't this purely a Python or user problem? R shouldn't process
redirection directives like
1> "~/log.txt" 2>&1
because it's the shell's job to process those. If Python is acting as
the shell, it needs to handle those things. If R was handling the
command via
Duncan Murdoch
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