Rcpp profoundly changed the R landscape. Basically, it made all performance bottlenecks vanish and I’m not surprised that so many packages are now using it:
As of May 2017, 1026 packages on CRAN and a further 91 on BioConductor deploy Rcpp to extend R. (www.rcpp.org - October 17, 2018)
Even people that do not know nothing about Rcpp are likely to use it on a regular basis as most packages for data science are now linked to Rcpp (e.g. dplyr).
Even though I am comfortable with Rcpp, I still do silly mistakes. Yesterday for instance, I was working on a package I am contributing to and ran into a
problem that I should have easily avoided. I compiled one of the .cpp
files
without any issue but after a while (and when I tried to exit R) I got the error below:
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So after I spent few minutes wondering what did I do wrong, I realized that since the last time I worked on this package I had installed newer versions of R, Rcpp and gcc. So, I figured out that it is likely that the compilation process must have changed enough that I needed to rebuild all .o
(object) and .so
(shared object) files files. That’s what I did and it worked 🏆!