Many R packages I work with involve functions that give all their messages and warnings through commands to print() calls rather than commands to message() or warning(). I'd like to be able to silence these functions progress indicators, etc, but the standard supressWarnings() or supressMessages doesn't do it. Is there a way I can just suppressPrint?
For example:
silly_developer_function <- function(x){ print("Thanks for using my function!!") if(is(x, "numeric")) print("warning, x should be a character") x }
I'd like to have a simple function suppressPrint() that I could wrap around a call to this function that would suppress the warning and useless messages (but still print the return value).
To display ( or print) a text with R, use either the R-command cat() or print(). Note that in each case, the text is considered by R as a script, so it should be in quotes. Note there is subtle difference between the two commands so type on your prompt help(cat) and help(print) to see the difference.
Well, those packages are buggy to start with. Use of print()
for anything but side-effect in print
implementations is a serious mistake.
That said, you can simply use capture.output()
to collect the output from such code instead of printing it. So for the above it would be
capture.output(x <- silly_developer_function(...)) print(x)
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