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Kickstarting R
Finding the function that you want

Why can't I find those functions that the gurus know about?

R has a whole lot of built-in functions, and a small army of contributors who are busily cranking out more all the time. There is hardly anything more irritating than spending hours writing a function that turns up as a one-liner on the R-help list. R has a neat search engine in the HTML help package to help you find functions, but there are two little problems with it. First, it's written in Java, and this means that it will only run on a browser that has a Java engine. Second, and perhaps more important, the index is pre-written, so that the keyword you use must match the keyword that someone else used. Given the tradition of naming things as you damn well please in many disciplines, you may find that your treasured keywords aren't shared by other people. Especially other people who wrote the help index.

What you need here is the ability to search the descriptions of the functions for the words you know. Programs like htdig allow you to perform a full-text search of the R documentation and find out which function descriptions match your keywords. If you're not that lucky, but do have Tcl/Tk installed on your PC, there is still hope.

Part of the Kickstarting R package is a little text searching facility called DIYHelp. The program is based upon a simple, brute-force search of the directory tree from the point that you specify. The concept is that you often know approximately where the information you want to know is, but not exactly which file.

By unpacking the diyhelp.tar.gz file in a suitable place (often /usr/local) and following the instructions in the INSTALL file, you can see if the program helps you to find functions in R.

DIYHelp allows you to enter a keyword and a directory in which to begin the search. It will then build a list of all the files under that directory that it can display that contain the keyword. When you select one of these files, it will start up a program appropriate to display the file. It can also pare down the list to just the files you find helpful, and save the list for future reference. As an example, using R-1.6.2, the function help.search() returns 28 help documents with the keyword "correlation", while DIYHelp returns a list of 139. Obviously, most of these won't be of use, but the list is exhaustive. I would particularly like feedback on this little program, as I have found it quite helpful in locating the function I need, but am ignorant of the name.

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