\name{sourceCpp} \alias{sourceCpp} \title{ Source C++ Code from a File or String } \description{ \code{sourceCpp} parses the specified C++ file or source code and looks for functions marked with the \code{\link[=exportAttribute]{Rcpp::export}} attribute. A shared library is then built and its exported functions are made available as R functions in the specified environment. } \usage{ sourceCpp(file = "", code = NULL, env = globalenv(), rebuild = FALSE, showOutput = verbose, verbose = getOption("verbose")) } %- maybe also 'usage' for other objects documented here. \arguments{ \item{file}{ A character string giving the path name of a file } \item{code}{ A character string with source code. If supplied, the code is taken from this string instead of a file. } \item{env}{ Environment where the R functions should be made available. } \item{rebuild}{ Force a rebuild of the shared library. } \item{showOutput}{ \code{TRUE} to print \code{R CMD SHLIB} output to the console. } \item{verbose}{ \code{TRUE} to print detailed information about generated code to the console. } } \details{ If the \code{code} parameter is provided then the \code{file} parameter is ignored. Functions exported using \code{sourceCpp} must meet several conditions, including being defined in the global namespace and having return types that are compatible with \code{Rcpp::wrap} and parameter types that are compatible with \code{Rcpp::as}. See the \code{\link[=exportAttribute]{Rcpp::export}} documentation for more details. If the source file has compilation dependencies on other packages (e.g. \pkg{Matrix}, \pkg{RcppArmadillo}) then an \code{\link[=dependsAttribute]{Rcpp::depends}} attribute should be provided naming these dependencies. It's possible to embed chunks of R code within a C++ source file by including the R code within a block comment with the prefix of \code{/*** R}. For example: \preformatted{ /*** R # Call the fibonacci function defined in C++ fibonacci(10) */ } Multiple R code chunks can be included in a C++ file. All R code is sourced after the C++ functions within the file have been defined. } \value{ Returns (invisibly) a character vector with the names of the R functions that were sourced into the specified environment. } \note{ The \code{sourceCpp} function will not rebuild the shared library if the source file has not changed since the last compilation. The \code{sourceCpp} function is designed for compiling a standalone source file whose only dependencies are R packages. If you are compiling more than one source file or have external dependencies then you should create an R package rather than using \code{sourceCpp}. Note that the \code{\link[=exportAttribute]{Rcpp::export}} attribute can also be used within packages via the \code{\link{compileAttributes}} function. If you are sourcing a C++ file from within the \code{src} directory of a package then the package's \code{LinkingTo} dependencies, \code{inst/include}, and \code{src} directories are automatically included in the compilation. If no \code{Rcpp::export} attributes are found within the source file then a warning is printed to the console. You can disable this warning by setting the \code{rcpp.warnNoExports} option to \code{FALSE}. } \seealso{ \code{\link[=exportAttribute]{Rcpp::export}}, \code{\link[=dependsAttribute]{Rcpp::depends}}, \code{\link{cppFunction}}, \code{\link{evalCpp}} } \examples{ \dontrun{ sourceCpp("fibonacci.cpp") sourceCpp(code=' #include // [[Rcpp::export]] int fibonacci(const int x) { if (x == 0) return(0); if (x == 1) return(1); return (fibonacci(x - 1)) + fibonacci(x - 2); }' ) } }