Roll your own iPython Notebook server with Amazon Web Services (EC2) using their Free Tier.
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
## The following example demonstrates | |
## how a serach and replace string task | |
## can be peformed with R across several files | |
## Create two text files with content | |
filenames <- c( tempfile(), tempfile() ) | |
for( f in filenames ){ | |
cat("We wish you a Merry Christmas!\n\nBest regards\n", file=f) | |
} |
2017-08-03: Since I wrote this in 2014, the universe, specifically Kirill Müller (https://github.com/krlmlr), has provided better solutions to this problem. I now recommend that you use one of these two packages:
- rprojroot: This is the main package with functions to help you express paths in a way that will "just work" when developing interactively in an RStudio Project and when you render your file.
- here: A lightweight wrapper around rprojroot that anticipates the most likely scenario: you want to write paths relative to the top-level directory, defined as an RStudio project or Git repo. TRY THIS FIRST.
I love these packages so much I wrote an ode to here.
I use these packages now instead of what I describe below. I'll leave this gist up for historical interest. 😆
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
one <- seq(1:10) | |
two <- rnorm(10) | |
three <- runif(10, 1, 2) | |
four <- -10:-1 | |
df <- data.frame(one, two, three) | |
df2 <- data.frame(one, two, three, four) | |
str(df) |