The new version includes basic bug fixes, new test files and speed enhancements.
XML file structure is now smaller in size and this makes RCaller a little bit faster than the older versions.
The most important issue in this release is the method
public int[] getDimensions(String name)
which reports the dimensions of a given object with 'name'. Here is an example:
| int n = 21; |
| int m = 23; |
| double[][] data = new double[n][m]; |
| for (int i=0;i<data.length;i++){ |
| for (int j=0;j<data[0].length;j++){ |
| data[i][j] = Math.random(); |
| } |
| } |
| RCaller caller = new RCaller(); |
| Globals.detect_current_rscript(); |
| caller.setRscriptExecutable(Globals.Rscript_current); |
| RCode code = new RCode(); |
| code.addDoubleMatrix("x", data); |
| caller.setRCode(code); |
| caller.runAndReturnResult("x"); |
| int[] mydim = caller.getParser().getDimensions("x"); |
| Assert.assertEquals(n, mydim[0]); |
| Assert.assertEquals(m, mydim[1]);
In the code above, a matrix with dimensions 21 and 23 is passed to R and got back to Java. The variable mydim holds the number of rows and columns and they are as expected as 21 and 23. Please use the download link https://drive.google.com/?tab=mo&authuser=0#folders/0B-sn_YiTiFLGZUt6d3gteVdjTGM to access compiled jar files of RCaller. Good luck! |



