Re: [R-pkg-devel] Source code of an existing package

2016-08-10 Thread Tim Appelhans
Hi, I always use metacran to access package sources. https://github.com/cran/boot Tim On 11.08.2016 06:57, Holger Hoefling wrote: Hi, If you are interested in the source code of an entire package in its original form - you can also download the .tar.gz version of the package from CRAN. In a .t

Re: [R-pkg-devel] Source code of an existing package

2016-08-10 Thread Holger Hoefling
Hi, If you are interested in the source code of an entire package in its original form - you can also download the .tar.gz version of the package from CRAN. In a .tar.gz, you find the sources, unlike the .zip for windows, which is already compiled. If you are under windows, you can use a program

Re: [R-pkg-devel] Source code of an existing package

2016-08-10 Thread Dirk Eddelbuettel
On 10 August 2016 at 22:14, Ben Bolker wrote: | | Easiest way: | | library(boot) | boot.ci | | Alternatively, go to https://cran.r-project.org/package=boot , | download the tarball, unpack it, and look around in the R/ directory. Uwe Ligges wrote an 'R Help Desk' piece in R News about thi

Re: [R-pkg-devel] Source code of an existing package

2016-08-10 Thread Ben Bolker
Easiest way: library(boot) boot.ci Alternatively, go to https://cran.r-project.org/package=boot , download the tarball, unpack it, and look around in the R/ directory. On 16-08-10 09:42 PM, Marcelo Carvalho Fernandes wrote: > Hi all! > > I am interested in seeing the source code of the bo

[R-pkg-devel] Source code of an existing package

2016-08-10 Thread Marcelo Carvalho Fernandes
Hi all! I am interested in seeing the source code of the boot.ci() function of the boot package. Is it possible to have such source code? How? Thanks in advance, --- Marcelo Carvalho Fernandes __ R-package-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://sta