searcher

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The goal of searcher is to provide a search interface directly inside of R. For example, to look up rcpp example numeric vector or ggplot2 fix axis labels call one of the search_*() functions to automatically have a web browser open, go to a search site, and type the query. By default, the search functions will attempt to search the last error on call if no query is specified.

Installation

The searcher package is available on both CRAN and GitHub. The CRAN version is considered stable while the GitHub version is in a state of development and may break.

You can install the stable version of the searcher package with:

install.packages("searcher")

For the development version, you can opt for:

if(!requireNamespace("remotes")) { install.packages("remotes") }
remotes::install_github("coatless-rpkg/searcher")

Usage

library(searcher)

Search Terms

The search_*() functions can be used to search a query directly from R on major search engines, programming help websites, and code repositories. The following search platforms are supported: Google, Bing, DuckDuckGo, Startpage, Ecosia, rseek, Qwant, X (formerly Twitter), StackOverflow, RStudio Community, GitHub, grep.app, and BitBucket. By default, an appropriate suffix for each platform that ensures relevant results to R is appended to all queries. This behavior can be disabled by using rlang = FALSE.

# Searching R project on major search engines
search_google("R project")
search_bing("R project")
search_ecosia("R project")
search_rseek("R project")
search_qwant("R project")
search_duckduckgo("R project")                           # or search_ddg(...)
search_startpage("R project")                            # or search_sp(...)

# Searching Twitter to find out about machine learning for R and in general
search_twitter("machine learning")
search_twitter("machine learning", rlang = FALSE)

# Searching for linear regression questions for R and in general
search_stackoverflow("linear regression")
search_stackoverflow("linear regression", rlang = FALSE) # or search_so(...)

# Searching RStudio Community for tips
search_rstudio_community("tips")
search_rstudio_community("tips", rlang = FALSE)          # or search_rscom(...)

# Searching GitHub code for graphs in R and other languages
search_grep("graph")
search_grep("graph", rlang = FALSE)

# Searching GitHub Issues for maps in R and other languages
search_github("maps")
search_github("maps", rlang = FALSE)                     # or search_gh(...)

# Searching BitBucket for assertions in R and other languages
search_bitbucket("assertions")
search_bitbucket("assertions", rlang = FALSE)            # or search_bb(...)

Search Errors

searcher offers preliminary support for automatically or manually searching errors that are generated in R. For more robust error search support and to also search warning messages, please use the errorist package.

Automatically

Searching the last error automatically is possible by registering a function as R’s error handler via either searcher(site="") or one of the search_*() functions. Thus, when an error occurs, this function will automatically be called. This triggers a new browser window to open with the error term listed in verbatim.

# Using the generic search error handler
options(error = searcher("google"))

# Directly specify the search function
options(error = search_github)
options(error = search_google)

Manually

Alternatively, these functions can also be used manually so that the default error dispatch is preserved. In the manual case, you will have to explicitly call the search function. After that, a browser window will open with the last error message as the search query on the desired search portal.

search_google()
search_bing()
search_ecosia()
search_rseek()
search_qwant()
search_twitter()
search_grep()
search_duckduckgo()        # or search_ddg()
search_startpage()         # or search_sp()
search_stackoverflow()     # or search_so()
search_rstudio_community() # or search_rscom()
search_github()            # or search_gh()
search_bitbucket()         # or search_bb()

Package Customizations

The ability to customize different operations in searcher is possible by setting values in options() within ~/.Rprofile. Presently, the following options are available:

To set one of these options, please create the .Rprofile by typing into R:

file.edit("~/.Rprofile")

From there, add:

.First = function() {
  options(
    searcher.launch_delay       = 0,
    searcher.use_rstudio_viewer = FALSE,
    searcher.default_keyword    = "tidyverse"
    ## Additional options.
  )
}

Motivation

The idea for searcher began as a project to automatically search errors and warnings that occurred while working with R after a conversation among Dirk Eddelbuettel, Barry Rowlingson, and myself. However, there was no search interface that allowed querying directly from R outside of the built-in utils::RSiteSearch(), which only queries http://search.r-project.org/, and the sos package, which queries an off-site user premade database. Both of these options were focused solely on querying R documentation made available by packages. Given the nature of errors generally being undocumented, neither of these approaches could be used. Thus, searcher was unintentionally born to provide a means for errorist, which contains a robust way to automatically searching errors and warnings.

Special Thanks

Publicity

On the #rstats-twitter verse (c.f. https://twitter.com/search?q=%23rstats), searcher has been positively received by community members.

R package “searcher” that automatically searches Stackoverflow for error that you just saw in the console. Cool package, especially for those who learn R :) https://github.com/coatless-rpkg/searcher … #r #rlang #rstats #rstudio

— Paweł Przytuła March 23th, 2019. ~292 Retweets and 876 likes (Note, URL updated to new repository location.)

Did you know, using “searcher” package, you could automatically to search stackoverflow, google, GitHub and many more sites for errors, packages or topics. #rstats

— Shakirah Nakalungi (c.f. https://twitter.com/cynthia_kyra) June 29th, 2019, when she was Rotating Curator for the “We are R-Ladies” twitter account (c.f. https://twitter.com/WeAreRLadies/status/1144921174251581440) ~144 Retweets and 544 likes

Please let us know via an issue ticket about how you are using searcher.

License

GPL (>= 2)