(More) DeclareDesign R Package download problems - r

I asked a similar question a couple months ago, but the package, website, and code in question have since been updated and the solution I used previously is no longer effective.
The issue is that I am unable to install a particular package in R.
The new code provided for installation of the DeclareDesign package is as follows (source):
install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("DeclareDesign/DeclareDesign")
I've provided a screenshot of the error that I get when I try to run the above code. It looks to me like the problem is with the included 'estimatr' package, which apparently then causes the entire installation to fail.
How do I get this to work?

Your installation failed because devtools is trying to install estimatr from source, but you don't have the appropriate toolchain available to build it.
DeclareDesign now has a drat repository with pre-built binary packages for Mac and Windows, which should obviate the need to install Xcode or Rtools.
install.packages("DeclareDesign", repos="http://r.declaredesign.org")

DeclareDesign is now on CRAN, so you can install via
install.packages("DeclareDesign")

Related

Difficulty installing a package in R linux, dalton_rqi

Downloaded package from below URL.
Attempted to install using below command; response shown.
library(dalton.rqi,lib.loc='/home/X/Desktop/')
Error: package ‘dalton.rqi’ was built before R 3.0.0: please re-install it
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/departments/anesthesiology/depts/outcomes-research/risk-quantification
It appears this is a compiled package that maybe I don't have the source for? Is there a way to force install of the package? I'm unable to install using Rstudio GUI in its current form as a zip. Tried repackaging to tar.gz has Rstudio was looking for and also had a non-zero exit status error.
Any ideas?
I'm afraid this can't be achieved directly. The error message says it well: to use a package in R it needs to be built on an R version matching yours.
I can suggest two ways to move forward:
Contact the authors, ask for the R sources (it is somewhat surprising they did not make them available in the first place), and build the package yourself.
Downgrade your R version as far back as needed to match the one this pre-built package used.

Unable to open the R/Cape Package

Currently running R version 3.6.2 and RStudio version 1.2.5033 (both the latest versions as of today).
I have installed the R/Cape package from https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=cape, although when I try to load the package into R studio using:
library(cape)
I get the following from the RStudio console. RStudio then stops responding. I have tried this in just R as well and R also stops responding.
Can anybody please tell me if they've had any similar experiences and how they resolved them? Or if you've managed to install the 'cape' package how you did so?
The 'cape' library depends on other packages like 'htmltools' and many others. This is not an error message, just a warning. It means that some of the functions from 'tools:rstudio' will be replaced by other functions with the same name. See this answer which already addresses this.
As for the non-responsive behaviour, it is probably unrelated to the warnings discussed above. Try reinstalling R and updating all your packages. In Rstudio, you can update all your packages by clicking Tools > Update Packages > Select All > Install Updates.

How to install MVPARTwrap package in R version 3.6.1?

I am trying to install mvpart and MVPARTwrap packages in R version 3.6.1.
I install on my PC the folder of these two packages in zip version and load them in the relative folder of the package.
When I run the script library(mvpart) I get this message:
ERROR: 'mvpart' package was built before R 3.0.0: please reinstall it."
I try to load this library in the old version of R (version 2.15) and the message is
in install.packages (mvpart): object 'mvpart' not found".
I do not understand why it is impossible to load this package. Thanks so much.
Maybe the answer is no more relevant, but I just had to install those libraries so maybe it will still help someone later. I suggest the install from github as it will install dependencies, you need however to be able to compile the source. So here we go :
first install rtools if it is not already installed go here and follow the instruction
update/install devtools if necessary as described here
using this command, it should work now. you may be asked to update some packages, accept all
devtools::install_github("cran/mvpart")

Installing local binary packages using R CMD INSTALL on a Mac

I came across a package that is not available on CRAN. I tried to install the package using:
Packages & Data > Package Installer > Local Binary Package > At User
Level > [FileName.tgz] > Install...
This didn't work and I am now trying to use the R CMD INSTALL command. However, it seems I need to run that command in the command line interface but I cannot get it to install properly.
The package I'm trying to install is called gEcon. It can be found here. In particular, I am getting the following error message after "installing" the package:
Error: package or namespace load failed for ‘gEcon’:
package ‘gEcon’ was installed by an R version with different internals; it needs to be reinstalled for use with this R version
I assume it's the way I'm installing it.
Thanks in advance.
You're going to need to install Xcode apparently, because you've got to install this from source per these directions:
Now, you've gotta update R to the latest stable release, or if you prefer you can find the exact minimum newest version needed for gEcon.
After upgrading R you can complete the installation from source.
Original answer to original question:
Two things:
To access the command line and use R CMD on an Apple computer, please use the terminal.app app. Please see this for more details.
An easier and probably better approach is to install your package from the author's Github (or BitBucket, etc) repository using devtools::install_github or just use devtools::install on the downloaded source project.

Package installation issues with R 3.1.0

My Fedora system (Fedora 20, all up to date) has just had R updated to version 3.1.0. Since then, I've had issues installing multiple packages. glmnet failed previously, and now I'm having trouble with treemap. More specifically, I get an error during treemap installation that httpuv has zero exit status.
I never had issues with the previous version of R. Any reason this version should have such problems??
There could be many causes to do with your OS, version, permissions, other installed packages/software, etc, etc. Without seeing the full error message it's hard to know.
One possibility specific to httpuv is root privileges. I've noticed a few threads on various forums when searching for installation errors with this package and Linux, many of them mentioning root v. non-root issues. In another case, libuv needed to be upgraded.
I encounter package installation problems daily and I have some more general work-arounds as well. Hopefully one of these will solve your problem.
Install the package from source
download.file(url="http://cran.r-project.org/src/contrib/httpuv_1.3.0.tar.gz", destfile = "httpuv.tar.gz")
install.packages("httpuv.tar.gz", type = "source", repos = NULL)
Install using devtools via GitHub if the package supports it
Install RTools and re-try your package installation
Install an older version of the package
If those above do not work, then I dig deeper by referring to advice given to me by a VP of IT in my company. These comments were made in reference to frequent package installation problems I encountered when switching from Windows to Solaris:
There are two types of install/make problems. Missing .h files
and/or missing .so/.a libs. The reason for these are multiple:
1.- the package that delivers these is not installed. This means that those files cannot be found anywhere in the /usr tree. Solution is
install right package, make sure the files are there
2.- the includes are not found by the install configurator. This means some environment variable or install option is not properly set (this
is our case for RODBC). Figuring out which variable to set is
challenging without looking at the package documentation [fortunately, documentation is not hard to find!]
3.- the libs are not in the LD_LIBRARY_PATH, easy to fix.
4.- There is a deeper compile/link error, meaning the package is not compatible with the rest of the sw, or has not been properly ported.

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