2

After a bit of a gap I updated RStudio and all packages this morning.

I have a little function that I use to prettify currencies

currency <- function(n, k=FALSE) {
n <- ifelse(!k, str_c("£", comma(round(n,0))), str_c("£", comma(round(n/1000,0)),"k"))
return(n)
}

It now fails to parse - the problem is the £ sign.

Error in parse(text = lines, n = -1, srcfile = srcfile) : 

[path]/plot_helpers.R:72: 
25: unexpected INCOMPLETE_STRING
71: currency <- function(n, k=FALSE) {
72:   n <- ifelse(!k, str_c("
                        ^
In addition: Warning message:
In readLines(con, warn = FALSE, n = n, ok = ok, skipNul = skipNul) :
invalid input found on input connection '/home/richardc/ownCloud/prodr/R/plot_helpers.R'

However I can run the code within the editor and it works fine. What is causing readLines to fail in this way ?

2
  • that function code parses fine for me. you might have an unterminated string on line at or above line 70
    – hrbrmstr
    Nov 9, 2018 at 10:40
  • Thanks for helping. I should have been clearer - it used to parse fine for me too, and it is definitely the £ that causes readLines to fall over because if I change it for "GBP" it doesnt error. Nov 10, 2018 at 13:06

2 Answers 2

1

After some messing about today, I realise that the problem is in devtools. To recap here is a test project testencr.prj:

library(stringr)
library(devtools)

main <- function(n) {
  n <- str_c("£", n)
  return(n)
}

I can run the code fine from the console, but when I use devtools it barfs on the UTF-8 character:

> devtools::load_all()
Loading testencr
Error in parse(text = lines, n = -1, srcfile = srcfile) : 
  /home/richardc/ownCloud/test/R/test_enc.R:6:14: unexpected INCOMPLETE_STRING
5: main <- function(n) {
6:   n <- str_c("
                ^
In addition: There were 27 warnings (use warnings() to see them)

But when I add a specific encoding into the DESCRIPTION

Encoding: UTF-8

It is all fine (this notwithstanding the project defaults are UTF8)

Loading testencr
There were 36 warnings (use warnings() to see them)```


1

I was having the same problem, specifically in a Shiny app (not the rest of the time). I managed to solve it by using this unicode instead of £:

enc2utf8("\u00A3")

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.