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I'm struggling with the different R executables. What is the difference between R.exe (with or without CMD BATCH option), Rcmd.exe, Rscript.exe and Rterm.exe when running command line in a batch file?

And what is the difference between:

R.exe --no-environ --no-save < "c:\temp\R\test.R" > "c:\temp\R\out.txt" 2>&1

and

R.exe CMD BATCH --no-environ --no-save "c:\temp\R\test.R" "c:\temp\R\out.txt"

No difference in the output.

I cannot find anything about Rcmd.exe and Rscript.exe in the 3079 pages R reference manual.

By the way: I am using Windows.

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1 Answer 1

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Caveat: I work much more on Linux than Windows:

  • Rcmd.exe is a historical left-over as back in the day, you could not do R CMD something on Windows but needed the special executable Rcmd.exe something. That is no longer the case, yet it is provided for backwards compatibility.
  • Rterm.exe is also a holdover from the days when Rcmd.exe was used. Can be ignored these days.
  • R CMD BATCH is a crutch that was needed in the days before littler and Rscript.exe, and similarly lingering from old docs and habits..
  • Rscript.exe is your friend for batch scripts; use it.
  • For everything else, there's R.exe.

Other than that, as Marek hinted, the reference manual is the wrong one among the six available manuals. Try the Introduction to R and the Installation and Admin manuals both of which have specific appendices for Windows.

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    I just want to run a R script with command line agurments in a Windows (shell) batchfile. As I understand it correctly R.exe is enough for me.
    – waanders
    Aug 5, 2010 at 14:03
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    Sorry, forgot about Rterm.exe. Also a leftover. Aug 5, 2010 at 14:14
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    There is an important difference between R.exe and Rterm.exe - Rterm.exe is compiled with /LARGEADDRESSAWARE and can allocate 4 GB RAM when run under Windows 64 bit, unlike R.exe (we're talking about 32 bit R running under 64 bit Windows). Why would the R people do this only for Rterm.exe and not for R.exe, if Rterm.exe is obsolete?
    – Meh
    Oct 14, 2010 at 12:46
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    ... also an important difference between R and Rscript in that Rscript does not load package:methods ... and that is part of why it is your friend for batch scripts (faster start up time) : stackoverflow.com/questions/19680462/… Nov 3, 2017 at 1:11
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    The advice given here should be in the R and RStudio documentation. Rscript.exe is your friend for batch scripts; use it. For everything else, there's R.exe. The R and RStudio documentation is not very helpful for Windows users. R and RStudio are still very much written for the Unix / Linux / Mac OSX community. They need to point out up front what are the leftovers in the Windows R and RStudio distros from ancient Unix and DOS days. Jan 22, 2020 at 22:45

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