globalVariables
Declarations Used in Checking a Package
Description
For globalVariables
, the names supplied are of functions or other objects that should be regarded as defined globally when the check
tool is applied to this package. The call to globalVariables
will be included in the package's source. Repeated calls in the same package accumulate the names of the global variables.
Typical examples are the fields and methods in reference classes, which appear to be global objects to codetools
. (This case is handled automatically by setRefClass()
and friends, using the supplied field and method names.)
For suppressForeignCheck
, the names supplied are of variables used as .NAME
in foreign function calls which should not be checked by checkFF(registration = TRUE)
. Without this declaration, expressions other than simple character strings are assumed to evaluate to registered native symbol objects. The type of call (.Call
, .External
, etc.) and argument counts will be checked. With this declaration, checks on those names will usually be suppressed. (If the code uses an expression that should only be evaluated at runtime, the message can be suppressed by wrapping it in a dontCheck
function call, or by saving it to a local variable, and suppressing messages about that variable. See the example below.)
Usage
globalVariables(names, package, add = TRUE)
suppressForeignCheck(names, package, add = TRUE)
Arguments
names | The character vector of object names. If omitted, the current list of global variables declared in the package will be returned, unchanged. |
package | The relevant package, usually the character string name of the package but optionally its corresponding namespace environment. When the call to |
add | Should the contents of |
Details
The lists of declared global variables and native symbol objects are stored in a metadata object in the package's namespace, assuming the globalVariables
or suppressForeignCheck
call(s) occur as top-level calls in the package's source code.
The check command, as implemented in package tools
, queries the list before checking the R source code in the package for possible problems.
globalVariables
was introduced in R 2.15.1 and suppressForeignCheck
was introduced in R 3.1.0 so both should be used conditionally: see the example.
Value
globalVariables
returns the current list of declared global variables, possibly modified by this call.
suppressForeignCheck
returns the current list of native symbol objects which are not to be checked.
Note
The global variables list really belongs to a restricted scope (a function or a group of method definitions, for example) rather than the package as a whole. However, implementing finer control would require changes in check
and/or in codetools
, so in this version the information is stored at the package level.
Author(s)
John Chambers and Duncan Murdoch
See Also
dontCheck
.
Examples
## Not run:
## assume your package has some code that assigns ".obj1" and ".obj2"
## but not in a way that codetools can find.
## In the same source file (to remind you that you did it) add:
if(getRversion() >= "2.15.1") utils::globalVariables(c(".obj1", "obj2"))
## To suppress messages about a run-time calculated native symbol,
## save it to a local variable.
## At top level, put this:
if(getRversion() >= "3.1.0") utils::suppressForeignCheck("localvariable")
## Within your function, do the call like this:
localvariable <- if (condition) entry1 else entry2
.Call(localvariable, 1, 2, 3)
## HOWEVER, it is much better practice to write code
## that can be checked thoroughly, e.g.
if(condition) .Call(entry1, 1, 2, 3) else .Call(entry2, 1, 2, 3)
## End(Not run)
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Licensed under the GNU General Public License.