Apologize if I hijack this thread, but the use of ::: is something I was 
puzzled.

I tried Duncan's solution in my R package mypkg, something like:

pkg::callInternal("foo", args)

R CMD check mypkg

* checking dependencies in R code ... WARNING
'::' or ':::' import not declared from: ‘pkg'

I probably missed something here.

Thanks,
Zhu

-----Original Message-----
From: R-package-devel <r-package-devel-boun...@r-project.org> On Behalf Of 
Duncan Murdoch
Sent: Sunday, September 13, 2020 3:20 PM
To: David Kepplinger <david.kepplin...@gmail.com>; R Package Devel 
<r-package-devel@r-project.org>
Subject: Re: [R-pkg-devel] Use of `:::` in a package for code run in a parallel 
cluster

On 13/09/2020 3:51 p.m., David Kepplinger wrote:
> Dear list members,
> 
> I submitted an update for my package and got automatically rejected by 
> the incoming checks (as expected from my own checks) for using `:::` 
> calls to access the package's namespace.
> "There are ::: calls to the package's namespace in its code. A package
> *almost* never needs to use ::: for its own objects:…" (emphasis mine)
> 
> This was a conscious decision on my part as the package runs code on a 
> user-supplied parallel cluster and I consider cluster-exporting the 
> required functions a no-go as it would potentially overwrite objects 
> in the clusters R sessions. The package code does not own the cluster 
> and hence the R sessions. Therefore overwriting objects could 
> potentially lead to unintended behaviour which is opaque to the user and 
> difficult to debug.
> 
> Another solution to circumvent the R CMD check note is to export the 
> functions to the public namespace but mark them as internal. This was 
> also suggested in another thread on this mailing list (c.f. "Etiquette 
> for package submissions that do not automatically pass checks?"). I do 
> not agree with this work-around as the methods are indeed internal and 
> should never be used by users. Exporting truly internal functions for 
> the sake of satisfying R CMD check is a bad argument, in particular if 
> there is a clean, well-documented, solution by using `:::`

Who is calling this function:  package code or user code?  I assume it's a bit 
of a mix:  your package writes a script that calls the function when it runs in 
user space.  (It would help if you gave an explicit example of when you need to 
use this technique.)

If my assumption is correct, there are other simple workarounds besides 
exporting the functions.  Instead of putting

    pkg:::foo(args)

into your script, put

    pkg::callInternal("foo", args)

where pkg::callInternal is an exported function that can look up unexported 
functions in the namespace.

You may argue that you prefer pkg:::foo for some reason:  to which I'd respond 
that you are being rude to the CRAN volunteers.  I've offered two options (one 
in the previous thread, a different one here), and there was a third one in 
that thread offered by Ivan Krylov.  Surely one of these is good enough for 
your needs, and you shouldn't force CRAN to handle you specially.

Duncan

> 
> I argue `:::` is the only clean solution to this problem and no dirty 
> work-arounds are necessary. This is a prime example of where `:::` is 
> actually useful and needed inside a package. If the R community 
> disagrees, I think R CMD check should at least emit a WARNING instead 
> of a NOTE and elaborate on the problem and accepted work-arounds in 
> "Writing R extensions". Or keep emitting a NOTE but listing those 
> nebulous reasons where `:::` would be tolerated inside a package. 
> Having more transparent criteria for submitting to CRAN would be 
> really helpful to the entire R community and probably also reduce the traffic 
> on this mailing list.
> 
> Best,
> David
> 
>       [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
> 
> ______________________________________________
> R-package-devel@r-project.org mailing list 
> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-package-devel
>

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