Invoke a text editor on an R object.
# S3 method for default
edit(name = NULL, file = "", title = NULL,
     editor = getOption("editor"), …)vi(name = NULL, file = "")
emacs(name = NULL, file = "")
pico(name = NULL, file = "")
xemacs(name = NULL, file = "")
xedit(name = NULL, file = "")
a named object that you want to edit. If name is missing
    then the file specified by file is opened for editing.
a string naming the file to write the edited version to.
a display name for the object being edited.
usually a character string naming (or giving the path
    to) the text editor you want to use.  On Unix the default is set from
    the environment variables EDITOR or VISUAL if either is
    set, otherwise vi is used.  On Windows it defaults to
    "internal", the script editor.  On the macOS GUI the argument
    is ignored and the document editor is always used.
editor can also be an R function, in which case it is called
    with the arguments name, file, and title.  Note
    that such a function will need to independently implement all
    desired functionality.
further arguments to be passed to or from methods.
edit invokes the text editor specified by editor with
  the object name to be edited.  It is a generic function,
  currently with a default method and one for data frames and matrices.
data.entry can be used to edit data, and is used by edit
  to edit matrices and data frames on systems for which
  data.entry is available.
It is important to realize that edit does not change the object
  called name. Instead, a copy of name is made and it is that
  copy which is changed.  Should you want the changes to apply to the
  object name you must assign the result of edit to
  name.  (Try fix if you want to make permanent
  changes to an object.)
In the form edit(name),
  edit deparses name into a temporary file and invokes the
  editor editor on this file. Quitting from the editor causes
  file to be parsed and that value returned.
  Should an error occur in parsing, possibly due to incorrect syntax, no
  value is returned. Calling edit(), with no arguments, will
  result in the temporary file being reopened for further editing.
Note that deparsing is not perfect, and the object recreated after
  editing can differ in subtle ways from that deparsed: see
  dput and .deparseOpts. (The deparse options
  used are the same as the defaults for dump.)  Editing a
  function will preserve its environment.  See
  edit.data.frame for further changes that can occur when
  editing a data frame or matrix.
Currently only the internal editor in Windows makes use of the
  title option; it displays the given name in the window
  header.
# NOT RUN {
# use xedit on the function mean and assign the changes
mean <- edit(mean, editor = "xedit")
# use vi on mean and write the result to file mean.out
vi(mean, file = "mean.out")
# }
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