I am trying to use a c++ library together with Rcpp and Rstudio. The specific package I am trying to use is CGAL found HERE
I have Rstudio and Rcpp working in Widnows and Linux and I used install instructions from the CGAL pages. In linux it did the installs after adding dependencies.
In Windows it installed and created a CGAL_DIR
variable set to C:\dev\CGAL-4.11
and added C:\dev\CGAL-4.11\auxiliary\gmp\lib
to my PATH variable, but I have no idea what it added on the linux box.
I have read about adding Boost library How to use Boost library in C++ with Rcpp as well as RcppEigen, but that proved to be simple as I simply installed the package in Rstudio and used // [[Rcpp::depends(BH)]]
to use it, but I don't understand why for boost I need the full include path such as #include <boost/math/common_factor.hpp>
.
This my basic test code which compiles and runs as long as it has nothing from CGAL.
#include <RcppArmadillo.h>
#include <RcppEigen.h>
#include <Rcpp.h>
#include <RcppCommon.h>
#include <boost/math/common_factor.hpp>
//#include <CGAL/basic.h>
//#include <CGAL/QP_models.h>
//#include <CGAL/QP_functions.h>
// [[Rcpp::depends(RcppEigen)]]
// [[Rcpp::depends(BH)]]
// [[Rcpp::depends(RcppArmadillo)]]
// [[Rcpp::depends(RcppEigen)]]
using namespace Rcpp;
using namespace std;
using namespace arma;
using namespace RcppEigen;
using Eigen::Map;
using Eigen::MatrixXd;
using Eigen::VectorXd;
using Eigen::SelfAdjointEigenSolver;
// [[Rcpp::export]]
VectorXd getEigenValues(Map<MatrixXd> M) {
SelfAdjointEigenSolver<MatrixXd> es(M);
return es.eigenvalues();
}
// [[Rcpp::export]]
int computeGCD(int a, int b) {
return boost::math::gcd(a, b);
}
I believe I need to somehow tell the Rtools compiler to find the CGAL libraries. The CGAL page has detailed instructions for Visual Studio, but I don't know how to do that in Rstudio.
I tried copying the CGAL folder into Rtools and RbuildTools folders, which did not help. In Linux I believe the includes are in usr/ or usr/locals but I am less than clueless about how to find out.
All I know about the compiler is that is was from rtools through Rstudio and it works as far as Rcpp goes.
Edit,
I found that Rstudio installs packages in: C:\Program Files\R\R-3.3.1\library\
folder and from there each package has a folder and an include folder. In my example, the BH or boost package had no files in the include folder, but it had a boost
folder with a bunch of subfolders in it including math
which had the common_factor.hpp
file.
This explains how the includes work in R so I tried installing CGAL to the Library folder such that it's include folder would be at the next level just as with everything else. However, this did not work. Rcpp::depends cannot load and/or cannot find it.
It seems that R tools or Rstudio does something special when it installs packages that allows them to be used by R and Rcpp. Can anybody tell me how packages are installed so this works?