[R] [Rd] Problem with accessibility in R 4.2.0 and 4.2.1.
Uwe Ligges
||gge@ @end|ng |rom @t@t|@t|k@tu-dortmund@de
Sat Sep 24 07:45:04 CEST 2022
Note that the issues with the Rscript editor have been fixed in
R-patched and R-devel.
Best,
Uwe Ligges
On 22.09.2022 23:08, Andrew Hart via R-help wrote:
> On 22/09/2022 16:42, Toby Hocking wrote:
>> Another option is to use https://emacspeak.sourceforge.net/
>> <https://emacspeak.sourceforge.net/> (version of emacs editor/ide
>> which can speak letters/words/lines -- has a blind maintainer) with
>> https://ess.r-project.org/ <https://ess.r-project.org/> (interface for
>> editing and running R code from within emacs)
>
> Thanks everyone for all the suggestions. Of course, the optimal solution
> would be to figure out what is going on in Rgui, but, as is always the
> case, the blind user use case is a fairly niche one. I appreciate all
> the suggestions for finding an immediate solution to my problem.
> I don't use any kind of IDE for working with R since I simply haven't
> found one that is accessible or that i understand how to use. There is a
> plug-in for the Eclipse IDE I installed a few years ago, but I didn't
> understand the first thing about how it was to be used. So I've just
> always worked with an editor open in one Window and R in another,
> working interactively in R or bouncing over to the editor for more
> complex things and sourcing code into R as necessary. However, I only
> use the R console in Rgui. I went and had a look at Rterm, which I have
> never used on Windows; I've only ever used it when ssh-ing into Linux
> systems to use R. However, I've just found out that Rterm does a number
> of fairly important things that probably mean I can just use it instead
> of Rgui:
> 1. You can paste from the clipboard into the Rterm prompt;
> 2. It has a command history;
> 3. If you plot something, it opens a Window to draw the plot (I never
> realised it could do this and had always assumed Rgui was needed for
> this); and
> 4. It opens the HTML help if you ask for help on windows. I only ever
> saw it display text help on Linux, but I was logged in remotely.
> Text-based help is fine when ssh-ing into a machine, but HTML help is
> much nicer to read and navigate.
>
> I think I'll just switch over to Rterm for a while, but I can also check
> out ess, which I wasn't aware of.
>
> Thanks a lot,
> Andrew.
>
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