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I am trying to make a R script - test.R - that can take either a file or a text string directly from a pipe in unix as in either:

file | test.R

or:

cat Sometext | test.R

Tried to follow answers here and here but I am clearly missing something. Is it the piping above or my script below that gives me a error like:

me@lnx: cat AAAA | test.R
bash: test.R: command not found
cat: AAAA: No such file or directory

My test script:

#!/usr/bin/env Rscript
input <- file("stdin", "r")
x <- readLines(input)
write(x, "")

UPDATE.

The script:

#!/usr/bin/env Rscript
con <- file("stdin")
open(con, blocking=TRUE)
x <- readLines(con)
x <- somefunction(x) #Do something or nothing with x
write(x,"")
close(con)

Then both cat file | ./test.R and echo AAAA | ./test.R yield the expected.

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  • 1
    Regarding your bash, cat expects a file, that's why you're getting the AAAA: no such file or directory error. And your R file test.R usually isn't an executable, hence the command not found error.
    – mickey
    Dec 1, 2018 at 0:14
  • True. In my case it was executable. I think it had something to do with line endings. Deleting excess empty lines (and added back) in nano (or similar) editor appeared to fix that. And the ./ part . Dec 1, 2018 at 0:16

2 Answers 2

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I still like r over Rscript here (but then I am not unbiased in this ...)

edd@rob:~$ (echo "Hello,World";echo "Bye,Bye") | r -e 'X <- readLines(stdin());print(X)' -
Hello,World
Bye,Bye
[1] "Hello,World" "Bye,Bye"
edd@rob:~$ 

r can also read.csv() directly:

edd@rob:~$ (echo "X,Y"; echo "Hello,World"; echo "Bye,Bye") | r -d -e 'print(X)' -
      X     Y
1 Hello World
2   Bye   Bye
edd@rob:~$

The -d is essentially a predefined 'read stdin into X via read.csv' which I think I borrowed as an idea from rio or another package.

Edit: Your example works with small changes:

  1. Make it executable: chmod 0755 ex.R
  2. Pipe output in correctly, ie use echo not cat
  3. Use the ./ex.R notation for a file in the current dir
  4. I changed it to use print(x)

Then:

edd@rob:~$ echo AAA | ./ex.R
[1] "AAA"
edd@rob:~$
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  • Yeah littler is definitely something I use often (together with docopt) to write small R programs - however, here, I try to get a hang on the connection between stdin and Rscript. Nov 30, 2018 at 22:44
  • Working with stdin is one of those little things that are easier with r. At least to me :) Nov 30, 2018 at 23:01
  • I dont disagree on that (I am the one not understanding stdin) - but sometimes you have something more complex than one-liners that you need put into a script file for future use. (And such - I know - can also be interpreted by littler) Nov 30, 2018 at 23:07
  • Thats great. Got close in the meantime myself. And as a final variation I might need write(x, "") to STDOUT. Is it "correct" to make a close(con) ? Dec 1, 2018 at 0:08
  • Ah yes you should close the connection. Dec 1, 2018 at 0:13
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I generally use R from a terminal application (BASH shell). I have only done a few experiments with Rscript, but including the #! line allows the script to be run in R, while permitting the use of RScript to generate an executable file. I have to use chmod to set the executable flag on my test file. Your call to write() should print the same output to the console in R or RScript, but if I want to save my output to a file I call sink("fileName") to open the connection and sink() to close it. This generally gives me control of the output and how it is rendered. If I called my script "myScript.rs" and made it executable (chmod u+x myScript.rs) I can type something like ./myScript.rs to run it and get the output on OS X or Linux. Instead of a pipe | you might try redirection > or >> to create or append.

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