Hugo Locurcio 5810275996 Use SPDX license identifiers in the default bucket (#2211)
This leads to more consistent license properties and allows for easier
automated parsing. https://spdx.org/licenses/
2018-04-20 18:04:49 +02:00

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{
"homepage": "https://www.r-project.org",
"version": "3.4.4",
"license": "GPL-2.0",
"architecture": {
"64bit": {
"url": "https://cran.rstudio.com/bin/windows/base/R-3.4.4-win.exe",
"hash": "0ee0cd6ba4f3873c7dc361fd5603d6cdce2f11f048201d565a1af9467a339aa0",
"pre_install": "copy-item -recurse \"$dir\\bin\\x64\" \"$dir\\bin\\curr_arch\""
},
"32bit": {
"url": "https://cran.rstudio.com/bin/windows/base/R-3.4.4-win.exe",
"hash": "0ee0cd6ba4f3873c7dc361fd5603d6cdce2f11f048201d565a1af9467a339aa0",
"pre_install": "copy-item -recurse \"$dir\\bin\\i386\" \"$dir\\bin\\curr_arch\""
}
},
"innosetup": true,
"bin": [
"bin\\curr_arch\\r.exe",
"bin\\curr_arch\\rterm.exe",
"bin\\curr_arch\\rscript.exe"
],
"notes": "You'll need to type 'r.ps1' or 'r.cmd' to run R, because in Powershell 'r' runs the last command. Alternatively 'rterm' can be used to start the interactive R terminal session.
You can remove Powershell's 'r' command with:
rm alias:\\r
... but this only affects your current session: if you'd like to remove it for all future sessions you need to add the command above to your Powershell profile.
Annoying, right?! You might want to check out Pshazz (scoop install pshazz)--this has a plugin to remove some crazy aliases from Powershell, as well as many other improvements.
",
"checkver": {
"url": "https://cran.rstudio.com/bin/windows/base/",
"re": "<h1>R-([\\d.]+)"
},
"autoupdate": {
"architecture": {
"64bit": {
"url": "https://cran.rstudio.com/bin/windows/base/R-$version-win.exe"
},
"32bit": {
"url": "https://cran.rstudio.com/bin/windows/base/R-$version-win.exe"
}
}
}
}