promptMethods {methods} | R Documentation |
Generates a shell of documentation for the methods of a generic function.
promptMethods(f, filename = NULL, methods)
f |
a character string naming the generic function whose methods are to be documented. |
filename |
usually, a connection or a character string giving the
name of the file to which the documentation shell should be written.
The default corresponds to the coded topic name for these methods
(currently, f followed by "-methods.Rd" ). Can also be
FALSE or NA (see below). |
methods |
Optional methods list object giving the methods to be
documented. By default, the first methods object for this generic
is used (for example, if the current global environment has some
methods for f , these would be documented).
If this argument is supplied, it is likely to be getMethods(f, where) , with where some package
containing methods for f . |
If filename
is FALSE
, the text created is returned,
presumably to be inserted some other documentation file, such as the
documentation of the generic function itself (see
prompt
).
If filename
is NA
, a list-style representation of the
documentation shell is created and returned. Writing the shell to a
file amounts to cat(unlist(x), file = filename, sep = "\n")
,
where x
is the list-style representation.
Otherwise, the documentation shell is written to the file specified by
filename
.
If filename
is FALSE
, the text generated;
if filename
is NA
, a list-style representation of the
documentation shell.
Otherwise, the name of the file written to is returned invisibly.
The R package methods implements, with a few exceptions, the programming interface for classes and methods in the book Programming with Data (John M. Chambers, Springer, 1998), in particular sections 1.6, 2.7, 2.8, and chapters 7 and 8.
While the programming interface for the methods package follows
the reference, the R software is an original implementation, so
details in the reference that reflect the S4 implementation may appear
differently in R. Also, there are extensions to the programming
interface developed more recently than the reference. For a
discussion of details see ?Methods
and the links from that documentation.
prompt
and
promptClass