Load a given URL into an HTML browser.
browseURL(url, browser = getOption("browser"),
          encodeIfNeeded = FALSE)a non-empty character string giving the URL to be loaded. Some platforms also accept file paths.
a non-empty character string giving the name of the program to be used as the HTML browser. It should be in the PATH, or a full path specified. Alternatively, an R function to be called to invoke the browser.
Under Windows NULL is also allowed (and is the default), and
    implies that the file association mechanism will be used.
Should the URL be encoded by
    URLencode before passing to the browser?  This is not
    needed (and might be harmful) if the browser program/function
    itself does encoding, and can be harmful for file:// URLs on some
    systems and for http:// URLs passed to some CGI applications.
    Fortunately, most URLs do not need encoding.
Which URL schemes are accepted is platform-specific: expect http://, https:// and ftp:// to work, but mailto: may or may not (and if it does may not use the user's preferred email client).
For the file:// scheme the format accepted (if any) can depend on both browser and OS.
The default browser is set by option "browser", in turn set by
  the environment variable R_BROWSER which is by default set in
  file R_HOME/etc/Renviron to a choice
  made manually or automatically when R was configured.  (See
  Startup for where to override that default value.)
  To suppress showing URLs altogether, use the value "false".
On many platforms it is best to set option "browser" to a
  generic program/script and let that invoke the user's choice of
  browser.  For example, on macOS use open and on many other
  Unix-alikes use xdg-open.
If browser supports remote control and R knows how to perform
  it, the URL is opened in any already-running browser or a new one if
  necessary.  This mechanism currently is available for browsers which
  support the "-remote openURL(...)" interface (which includes
  Mozilla and Opera), Galeon, KDE konqueror (via kfmclient) and
  the GNOME interface to Mozilla. (Firefox has dropped support, but
  defaults to using an already-running browser.)  Note that the type of
  browser is determined from its name, so this mechanism will only be
  used if the browser is installed under its canonical name.
Because "-remote" will use any browser displaying on the X
  server (whatever machine it is running on), the remote control
  mechanism is only used if DISPLAY points to the local host.
  This may not allow displaying more than one URL at a time from a
  remote host.
It is the caller's responsibility to encode url if necessary
  (see URLencode).
To suppress showing URLs altogether, set browser = "false".
The behaviour for arguments url which are not URLs is
  platform-dependent.  Some platforms accept absolute file paths; fewer
  accept relative file paths.
The default browser is set by option "browser", in turn set by
  the environment variable R_BROWSER if that is set, otherwise to
  NULL.
  To suppress showing URLs altogether, use the value "false".
Some browsers have required : be replaced by | in file
  paths: others do not accept that.  All seem to accept \ as a
  path separator even though the RFC1738 standard requires /.
To suppress showing URLs altogether, set browser = "false".
# NOT RUN {
## for KDE users who want to open files in a new tab
options(browser = "kfmclient newTab")
browseURL("https://www.r-project.org")
## On Windows-only, something like
browseURL("file://d:/R/R-2.5.1/doc/html/index.html",
          browser = "C:/Program Files/Mozilla Firefox/firefox.exe")
# }
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