7

I'm developing an R package where the functions fall into logical groups; broadly, "Input", "Data Munging", "Analysis", "Output", "Info", and "Utils". I want my package index to be split into these major headings, in that order, with functions in each group listed in alphabetical order. I don't want anything silly like multiple cascading levels; one level will be fine.

The R package documentation system (which is otherwise a thing of beauty -- thanks guys!) gives me an index with vignettes and DESCRIPTION at the top, and then all the functions in alphabetical order. I thought that roxygen2 tags like @family or @describeIn would do the trick, but they don't. I've also noticed that some packages have their index split by initial function letter, but a quick look at the source code on Github doesn't suggest anything useful. Googling and Stackexchanging doesn't turn up anything beyond some hacks like this, which refers to lattice.

I can't believe I'm the first person in the history of R who has wanted to do this! I generally assume that reasonable-sounding things will be easy or at least possible in open-source packages -- they're generally written by reasonable people -- but I'm at a loss here.

1
  • 1
    I don't think it can be done. If I were in you, I'd follow what have been done for other packages, raster for example (see cran.r-project.org/web/packages/raster/raster.pdf): a big introduction with all the functions summarized by topic.
    – nicola
    Oct 29, 2016 at 13:59

1 Answer 1

1

I also have not found a way to create documentation that orders the functions by groups. I like the raster example pointed out by @nicola, where there is an introduction with functions grouped by topic. It was not entirely clear to me whether they had to enter this extra documentation by hand, so I came up with a hack (related to the lattice documentation) that uses roxygen2 @family and will generate a list of similar functions at the top of the documentation automatically. Give the group an @family tag and make sure to give all the other functions in that group the same @family tag:

#' Heading A
#'
#' Functions used for "a" purpose
#' @name A1 
#' @family a functions
NULL

#' Heading B
#' 
#' Functionsed used for "b" purpose
#' @name A2
#' @family b functions
NULL

#' foo
#' @param x
#' @family a functions
foo <- function(x) x * 10

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.