Sometimes I get accustomed to a particular R package's design and want to search CRAN for all packages by that author (let's use Hadley Wickham for instance). How can I do such a search (I'd like to use R but this doesn't have to be the mode of search)?
-
I think this post stackoverflow.com/questions/8722233/… has the basic ingredients you need ...– Ben BolkerApr 10, 2012 at 1:50
-
2I posted a similar question a few days ago (stackoverflow.com/questions/10032079/…) but it was quickly closed for not being a real programming question. I hope you'll be more lucky than me (admittedly, your wording is much better than mine!). If you are interested in a R solution, I have posted an article with code for scraping (some of) crantastic's data into a data.frame at r-de-jeu.blogspot.com/2012/04/50-most-used-r-packages.html.– flodelApr 10, 2012 at 1:57
-
I removed the answer posted in the question, and added it to the answer provided by @DWin. Please don't answer your own question inside the question - this gets too confusing. If the posted answer don't quite get there, post and accept your own answer.– AndrieJun 16, 2012 at 5:35
4 Answers
Crantastic can search by author. You can do quite a bit more with crantastic but the functionality you're looking for is already provided there.
-
That works but I can't seem to search but must search through the list of packages until I find the package of an author I want and then I can click on their name. If I'm using it wrong let me know. For example if I search for dbConnect I can find that author and click his name but I can't seem to type "Kurkiewicz" (dbConnect's author) into the search bar and return his packages. If this is the best approach it'll do but it seems like there's got to be a better way or maybe I'm doing it wrong. Apr 10, 2012 at 1:47
-
I guess I didn't actually try the search bar which doesn't appear to search through the package maintainers. On that page I just did a simple Ctrl-f and searched the page that way.– DasonApr 10, 2012 at 2:03
-
didn't know about Ctrl + f That works. First response and probably the quickest thus far gets the check. Apr 10, 2012 at 2:08
Not exactly by author but perhaps access by maintainer would also be useful?
http://cran.r-project.org/web/checks/check_summary_by_maintainer.html#summary_by_maintainer
EDIT by Tyler Rinker
DWin's suggestion can be brought to fruition with these lines of code:
search.lib <- function(term, column = 1){
require(XML)
URL <- "http://cran.r-project.org/web/checks/check_summary_by_maintainer.html#summary_by_maintainer"
dat <-readHTMLTable(doc=URL, which=1, header=T, as.is=FALSE)
names(dat) <- trimws(names(dat))
dat$Maintainer[dat$Maintainer == ""] <- NA
dat$Maintainer = zoo::na.locf(dat$Maintainer)
if (is.numeric(column)) {
dat[agrep(term, dat[, column]), 1:3]
} else {
dat[agrep(term, dat[, agrep(column, colnames(dat))]), 1:3]
}
}
search.lib("hadley")
search.lib("bolker")
search.lib("brewer", 2)
-
DWin I posted an edit (a solution) to my question using your suggestion +1 Apr 10, 2012 at 3:32
-
Due to blank rows, only the alphabetically first package by each author was being returned---maybe due to formatting updates on the site? Edited to fill in missing values and return all results. Dec 19, 2017 at 18:15
Adapted from available.packages by publication date :
## restrict to first 100 packages (by alphabetical order)
pkgs <- unname(available.packages()[, 1])[1:100]
desc_urls <- paste0(options("repos")$repos,"/web/packages/", pkgs,
"/DESCRIPTION")
desc <- lapply(desc_urls, function(x) read.dcf(url(x)))
authors <- sapply(desc, function(x) x[, "Author"])
Since I'm a narcissist (and Hadley Wickham has no packages in the first 100 [this was true in 2012 but cannot possibly be true now, in 2018!]):
pkgs[grep("Bolker",authors)]
# [1] "ape"
The main problem with this solution is that doing it for real (rather than just for the first 100 packages) means hitting CRAN 3000+ times for the package information ...
edit: a better solution, based on Jeroen Oom's solution in the same place:
recent.packages.rds <- function(){
mytemp <- tempfile()
download.file(paste0(options("repos")$repos,"/web/packages/packages.rds"),
mytemp)
mydata <- as.data.frame(readRDS(mytemp), row.names=NA)
mydata$Published <- as.Date(mydata[["Published"]])
mydata
}
mydata <- recent.packages.rds()
unname(as.character(mydata$Package[grep("Wickham",mydata$Author)]))
# [1] "classifly" "clusterfly" "devtools" "evaluate" "fda"
# [6] "geozoo" "ggmap" "ggplot2" "helpr" "hints"
# [11] "HistData" "hof" "itertools" "lubridate" "meifly"
# [16] "memoise" "munsell" "mutatr" "normwhn.test" "plotrix"
# [21] "plumbr" "plyr" "productplots" "profr" "Rd2roxygen"
# [26] "reshape" "reshape2" "rggobi" "roxygen" "roxygen2"
# [31] "scales" "sinartra" "stringr" "testthat" "tourr"
# [36] "tourrGui"
-
3The code should go to the
fortunes
package. Q: what do you get if you grep Bolker in R package authors? A: An ape. Apr 10, 2012 at 2:04 -
Thanks Ben. Definitely an approach but as you point out takes a considerable amount of time. Dason's approach is likely the most efficient. Thanks for the R solution :) Apr 10, 2012 at 2:09
-
@Ben your method looks interesting but I can't get it to work. I'm using a Win 7 with the latest version of R (2.15 Easter ...). I get an error that says
Error in readRDS(mytemp) : error reading from connection
If you want more about the error let me know but the problem may be with the windows machine withdownload.file
though I've used this before. Apr 10, 2012 at 3:31 -
Don't know, sorry ... worked for me (Ubuntu 10.04, r-devel). Does setting
options(repos=...)
explicitly first help? Apr 10, 2012 at 12:45
Bolker's solution above is quite quick and still works, but since 2018 there's a package called pkgsearch that outputs more complete information. Here's a demo, continuing the trend of shameless self-promotion:
r$> pkgsearch::advanced_search(Author = "Waldir", size = 100)
- "advanced search" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 packages in 0.001 seconds -
# package version by @ title
1 100 matlab2r 1.0.0 Waldir Leoncio 1M Translation Layer from MATLAB to R
2 100 simExam 1.0.0 Waldir Leoncio 3y Generate Simulated Data for IRT-Enabled Exams
3 83 citation 0.6.2 Jan Philipp Dietrich 1M Software Citation Tools
4 83 LOGAN 1.0.0 Denise Reis Costa 3y Log File Analysis in International Large-Scale Assessments
5 82 TruncExpFam 1.0.0 Waldir Leoncio 7d Truncated Exponential Family
6 61 contingencytables 1.0.0 Waldir Leoncio 1M Statistical Analysis of Contingency Tables
7 60 DIscBIO 1.2.0 Waldir Leoncio 10M A User-Friendly Pipeline for Biomarker Discovery in Single-Cell Transcriptomics
8 51 BayesSUR 2.0.1 Zhi Zhao 3M Bayesian Seemingly Unrelated Regression
9 44 lsasim 2.1.2 Waldir Leoncio 4M Functions to Facilitate the Simulation of Large Scale Assessment Data
10 39 BayesMallows 1.1.0 Oystein Sorensen 3M Bayesian Preference Learning with the Mallows Rank Model
11 11 xaringan 0.22 Yihui Xie 8M Presentation Ninja
Notice I had to increase size
from the default of 10 otherwise I wouldn't get all the packages.
For comparison with the output on the aforementioned answer:
r$> unname(as.character(mydata$Package[grep("Waldir",mydata$Author)]))
[1] "BayesMallows" "BayesSUR" "citation" "contingencytables" "DIscBIO" "LOGAN" "lsasim" "matlab2r" "simExam"
[10] "TruncExpFam" "xaringan"