Pardon my shooting from the hip here, but IMO if you're using R for something radically different than statistical analysis and data visualization, you're probably better off using a tool/language that's more purpose-suited.<p>> As someone who basically uses R as a nice LISP-y scripting language to orchestrate calling low-level compiled code from other languages<p>When I read this, I think, would `bash` or something equally portable/universally installed work?<p>R is a beautiful thing when limited to its core uses But in my experience, the more we build away from those core uses, the more brittleness we introduce. I wish the Posit team would focus on the core R experience, resolve some of the hundreds of open issues on its core packages in a timely way [0,1], and just generally play to R's strengths.<p>[0] <a href="https://github.com/rstudio/rmarkdown/issues">https://github.com/rstudio/rmarkdown/issues</a><p>[1] <a href="https://github.com/tidyverse/ggplot2/issues">https://github.com/tidyverse/ggplot2/issues</a>
I dunno why you would blog about, and even create a blog tag for, Positron without linking to it :-/<p><a href="https://github.com/posit-dev/positron">https://github.com/posit-dev/positron</a> (Elastic V2)