You can install formatR from CRAN, or yihui.r-universe.dev if you want to test the latest development version:
install.packages("formatR", repos = "http://cran.rstudio.com")
# or development version
options(repos = c(yihui = "https://yihui.r-universe.dev", CRAN = "https://cloud.r-project.org"))
install.packages("formatR")
Or check out the Github repository and install from source if you know what this means. This page is always based on the development version.
## R version 4.4.2 (2024-10-31)
## Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
## Running under: Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS
##
## Matrix products: default
## BLAS: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/openblas-pthread/libblas.so.3
## LAPACK: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/openblas-pthread/libopenblasp-r0.3.26.so; LAPACK version 3.12.0
##
## locale:
## [1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC=C
## [3] LC_TIME=en_US.UTF-8 LC_COLLATE=C
## [5] LC_MONETARY=en_US.UTF-8 LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8
## [7] LC_PAPER=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NAME=C
## [9] LC_ADDRESS=C LC_TELEPHONE=C
## [11] LC_MEASUREMENT=en_US.UTF-8 LC_IDENTIFICATION=C
##
## time zone: Etc/UTC
## tzcode source: system (glibc)
##
## attached base packages:
## [1] stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods
## [7] base
##
## other attached packages:
## [1] formatR_1.14.1 knitr_1.49.1
##
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
## [1] digest_0.6.37 R6_2.5.1 fastmap_1.2.0
## [4] xfun_0.49.4 maketools_1.3.1 cachem_1.1.0
## [7] htmltools_0.5.8.1 rmarkdown_2.29 buildtools_1.0.0
## [10] lifecycle_1.0.4 cli_3.6.3 sass_0.4.9
## [13] jquerylib_0.1.4 compiler_4.4.2 sys_3.4.3
## [16] tools_4.4.2 evaluate_1.0.1 bslib_0.8.0
## [19] yaml_2.3.10 jsonlite_1.8.9 rlang_1.1.4
The formatR package was designed to reformat R code
to improve readability; the main workhorse is the function
tidy_source()
. Features include:
else
statement on a separate line without the
leading }
will be moved one line back;=
as an assignment operator can be substituted with
<-
;%>%
can be substituted with |>
;{
can be moved to a new line;%>%
and R’s native pipe |>
are
supported).Below is an example of what tidy_source()
can do. The
source code is:
## comments are retained;
# a comment block will be reflowed if it contains long comments;
#' roxygen comments will not be wrapped in any case
1+1
if(TRUE){
x=1 # inline comments
}else{
x=2;print('Oh no... ask the right bracket to go away!')}
1*3 # one space before this comment will become two!
2+2+2 # only 'single quotes' are allowed in comments
lm(y~x1+x2, data=data.frame(y=rnorm(100),x1=rnorm(100),x2=rnorm(100))) ### a linear model
1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1+1 # comment after a long line
## here is a long long long long long long long long long long long long long comment that may be wrapped
We can copy the above code to clipboard, and type
tidy_source(width.cutoff = 50)
to get:
## comments are retained; a comment block will be
## reflowed if it contains long comments;
#' roxygen comments will not be wrapped in any case
1 + 1
if (TRUE) {
x = 1 # inline comments
} else {
x = 2
print("Oh no... ask the right bracket to go away!")
}
1 * 3 # one space before this comment will become two!
2 + 2 + 2 # only 'single quotes' are allowed in comments
lm(y ~ x1 + x2, data = data.frame(y = rnorm(100), x1 = rnorm(100),
x2 = rnorm(100))) ### a linear model
1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 +
1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 # comment after a long line
## here is a long long long long long long long
## long long long long long long comment that may
## be wrapped
Two applications of tidy_source()
:
tidy_dir()
can reformat all R scripts under a
directory
usage()
can reformat the usage of a function,
e.g. compare usage()
with the default output of
args()
:
library(formatR)
usage(glm, width = 40) # can set arbitrary width here
## glm(formula, family = gaussian, data,
## weights, subset, na.action,
## start = NULL, etastart, mustart,
## offset, control = list(...),
## model = TRUE, method = "glm.fit",
## x = FALSE, y = TRUE,
## singular.ok = TRUE,
## contrasts = NULL, ...)
args(glm)
## function (formula, family = gaussian, data, weights, subset,
## na.action, start = NULL, etastart, mustart, offset, control = list(...),
## model = TRUE, method = "glm.fit", x = FALSE, y = TRUE, singular.ok = TRUE,
## contrasts = NULL, ...)
## NULL
If the shiny packages has been installed, the
function tidy_app()
can launch a Shiny app to reformat R
code like this (live demo at
https://yihui.shinyapps.io/formatR/
):
After hitting the Format
button:
It is often a pain when trying to copy R code from other people’s
code which has been run in R and the prompt characters (usually
>
) are attached in the beginning of code, because we
have to remove all the prompts >
and +
manually before we are able to run the code. However, it will be
convenient for the reader to understand the code if the output of the
code can be attached. This motivates the function
tidy_eval()
, which uses tidy_source()
to
reformat the source code, evaluates the code in chunks, and attaches the
output of each chunk as comments which will not actually break the
original source code. Here is an example:
a <- 1 + 1
a # print the value
## [1] 2
matrix(rnorm(10), 5)
## [,1] [,2]
## [1,] -0.56047565 1.7150650
## [2,] -0.23017749 0.4609162
## [3,] 1.55870831 -1.2650612
## [4,] 0.07050839 -0.6868529
## [5,] 0.12928774 -0.4456620
The default source of the code is from clipboard like
tidy_source()
, so we can copy our code to clipboard, and
simply run this in R:
We continue the example code in Section 2, using different arguments
in tidy_source()
such as arrow
,
blank
, indent
, brace.newline
and
comment
, etc.
=
with <-
Note the 5th line (an empty line) was discarded:
## comments are retained; a comment block will be reflowed if it
## contains long comments;
#' roxygen comments will not be wrapped in any case
1 + 1
if (TRUE) {
x = 1 # inline comments
} else {
x = 2
print("Oh no... ask the right bracket to go away!")
}
1 * 3 # one space before this comment will become two!
With args.newline = TRUE
, the example code below
shiny::updateSelectizeInput(session, "foo", label = "New Label", selected = c("A",
"B"), choices = LETTERS, server = TRUE)
will be reformatted to:
%>%
and |>
Since formatR 1.9, code lines contains operators
|>
, %>%
, %T%
,
%$%
, and/or %<>%
will be automatically
wrapped after these operators. For example,
will be reformatted to:
{
to new linesThe tricks used in this packages are very dirty. There might be
dangers in using the functions in formatR. Please read
the next section carefully to know exactly how comments are preserved.
The best strategy to avoid failure is to put comments in complete lines
or after complete R expressions. Below are some known cases in
which tidy_source()
fails.
1 + 2 + ## comments after an incomplete line
3 + 4
x <- ## this is not a complete expression
5
x <- 1; # you should not use ; here!
Code with comments after incomplete R expression cannot be
reformatted by formatR. By the way,
tidy_source()
will move comments after {
to
the next line, e.g.,
will become
Blank lines are often used to separate complete chunks of R code, and
arbitrary blank lines may cause failures in tidy_source()
as well when the argument blank = TRUE
, e.g.
There should not be a blank line after the if
statement.
Of course blank = FALSE
will not fail in this case.
tidy_source()
actually work?In a nutshell, tidy_source(text = code)
is basically
deparse(parse(text = code))
, but actually it is more
complicated only because of one thing: deparse()
drops
comments, e.g.,
## [1] "expression(1 + 2 - 3 * 4/5)"
The method to preserve comments is to protect them as strings in R expressions. For example, there is a single line of comments in the source code:
It will be first masked as
which is a legal R expression, so base::parse()
can deal
with it and will no longer remove the disguised comments. In the end the
identifiers will be removed to restore the original comments, i.e. the
strings invisible(".IDENTIFIER1
and
.IDENTIFIER2")
are substituted with empty strings.
Inline comments are handled differently: two spaces will be added
before the hash symbol #
, e.g.
will become
Inline comments are first disguised as a weird operation with its preceding R code, which is essentially meaningless but syntactically correct! For example,
then base::parse()
will deal with this expression;
again, the disguised comments will not be removed. In the end, inline
comments will be freed as well (remove the operator %\b%
and surrounding double quotes).
All these special treatments to comments are due to the fact that
base::parse()
and base::deparse()
can tidy the
R code at the price of dropping all the comments.
There are global options which can override some arguments in
tidy_source()
:
argument | global option | default |
---|---|---|
comment |
options('formatR.comment') |
TRUE |
blank |
options('formatR.blank') |
TRUE |
arrow |
options('formatR.arrow') |
FALSE |
pipe |
options('formatR.pipe') |
FALSE |
indent |
options('formatR.indent') |
4 |
wrap |
options('formatR.wrap') |
TRUE |
width.cutoff |
options('formatR.width') |
options('width') |
brace.newline |
options('formatR.brace.newline') |
FALSE |
args.newline |
options('formatR.args.newline') |
FALSE |
Also note that single lines of long comments will be wrapped into
shorter ones automatically when wrap = TRUE
, but roxygen
comments will not be wrapped (i.e., comments that begin with
#'
).