R: Data Analysis and Visualization
by Tony Fischetti, Brett Lantz, Jaynal Abedin, Hrishi V. Mittal, Bater Makhabel, Edina Berlinger, Ferenc Illés, Milán Badics, Ádám Banai, Gergely Daróczi, Barbara Dömötör, Gergely Gabler, Dániel Havran, Péter Juhász, István Margitai, Balázs Márkus, Péter Medvegyev, Julia Molnár, Balázs Árpád Szucs, Ágnes Tuza, Tamás Vadász, Kata Váradi, Ágnes Vidovics-Dancs
Using another R implementation
R is both a language and an implementation of that language. So far, when we've been talking about the R environment/platform, we've been talking about the GNU Project started by R. Ihaka and R. Gentlemen at the University of Auckland in 1993 and hosted at http://www.r-project.org. Since R has no standard specification, this canonical implementation serves as R's de facto specification. If a project is able to implement this specification—and rewrite the GNU-R functionality-for-functionality and bug-for-bug—any valid R code can be run on that implementation.
Sometime around 2009, various other implementation of R started to crop up. Among these are Renjin (running on the Java Virtual Machine), pqR (which stands for ...
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