removed redundant :sep \t from org-tbl-to-tsv call in litorgy-R

This commit is contained in:
Eric Schulte 2009-05-19 20:49:05 -07:00
parent 700324bfbf
commit 14296239ea
2 changed files with 36 additions and 24 deletions

View File

@ -67,14 +67,11 @@ R process in `litorgy-R-buffer'."
cell
(format "%S" cell))) row)) value)))
(with-temp-file transition-file
;; DED: I think the :sep "\t" is redundant here as
;; orgtbl-to-tsv adds it automatically?
(insert (orgtbl-to-tsv value '(:sep "\t" :fmt litorgy-R-quote-tsv-field)))
(insert (orgtbl-to-tsv value '(:fmt litorgy-R-quote-tsv-field)))
(insert "\n"))
(litorgy-R-input-command
(format "%s <- read.table(\"%s\", sep=\"\\t\", as.is=TRUE)" name transition-file)))))
(defun litorgy-R-to-elisp (func-name)
"Return the result of calling the function named FUNC-NAME in
`litorgy-R-buffer' as Emacs lisp."

View File

@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
#+SEQ_TODO: TODO OPEN PROPOSED | DONE DEFERRED REJECTED
#+STARTUP: oddeven
* Tasks [9/20]
* Tasks [10/20]
** TODO results-type header (scalar/vector)
In response to a point in Dan's email. We should allow the user to
force scalar or vector results. This could be done with a header
@ -16,6 +16,7 @@ configuration variable.
think it would be possible to avoid having to write to file by
constructing an R expression in litorgy-R-assign-elisp, something
like this
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(litorgy-R-input-command
(format "%s <- read.table(textConnection(\"%s\"), sep=\"\\t\", as.is=TRUE)"
@ -28,6 +29,17 @@ configuration variable.
[Eric] Sounds like a good idea, I'll bump this up to TODO
for quick tests
#+tblname: quick-test
| 1 | 2 | 3 |
#+begin_src R :var vec=quick-test
mean(mean(vec))
#+end_src
: 2
** TODO re-implement R evaluation using ess-command or ess-execute
I don't have any complaints with the current R evaluation code or
behaviour, but I think it would be good to use the ESS functions
@ -82,25 +94,6 @@ du -sc ~/*
(mapcar #'car sizes)
#+end_src
** TODO litorgy tests litorgy [0/1]
since we are accumulating this nice collection of source-code blocks
in the sandbox section we should make use of them as unit tests.
What's more, we should be able to actually use litorgy to run these
tests.
We would just need to cycle over every source code block under the
sandbox, run it, and assert that the return value is equal to what we
expect.
I have the feeling that this should be possible using only litorgical
functions with minimal or no additional elisp. It would be very cool
for litorgy to be able to test itself.
*** TODO litorgical assertions
These could be used to make assertions about the results of a
source-code block. If the assertion fails then the point could be
moved to the block, and error messages and highlighting etc... could
ensue
** TODO inline source code blocks [3/5]
Like the =\R{ code }= blocks
@ -206,6 +199,28 @@ one that comes to mind is the ability to treat a source-code block
like a function which accepts arguments and returns results. Actually
this can be it's own TODO (see [[* source blocks as functions][source blocks as functions]]).
** DONE litorgy tests litorgy [1/1]
since we are accumulating this nice collection of source-code blocks
in the sandbox section we should make use of them as unit tests.
What's more, we should be able to actually use litorgy to run these
tests.
We would just need to cycle over every source code block under the
sandbox, run it, and assert that the return value is equal to what we
expect.
I have the feeling that this should be possible using only litorgical
functions with minimal or no additional elisp. It would be very cool
for litorgy to be able to test itself.
This is now done, see [[* Tests]].
*** DEFERRED litorgical assertions (may not be necessary)
These could be used to make assertions about the results of a
source-code block. If the assertion fails then the point could be
moved to the block, and error messages and highlighting etc... could
ensue
** DONE make C-c C-c work anywhere within source code block?
This seems like it would be nice to me, but perhaps it would be
inefficient or ugly in implementation? I suppose you could search