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The zephyr package provides small functionalities for developers of R packages to inform users about progress and issues, while at the same time allowing them to easily configure the amount of information they want to receive through package level options.

You have probably encountered arguments like verbose or silent in miscellaneous functions. These arguments are used to control whether to print information to the console, where the developer of the function has usually done a logical check inside their function, and if TRUE, they print information to the console. For the developer, doing these logical checks explicitly each time information should be printed (or not) can create a lot of redundant code. For users, they need to set the argument in the function call each time they want to change the default behaviour, and often the users are left with the dichotomy of either getting every piece of information or none.

The zephyr package provides tools for making this easier for both developers and end users. This is done by providing functionalities for writing messages that automatically performs the logical check based on the verbosity level set in the package options. The verbosity level can be set at the package level, and the user can easily configure the verbosity level by setting options of environmental variables either on a package level with prefix packagename., or globally alter the behavior of functions from zephyr by setting options of environmental variables with the prefix zephyr..

Zephyr message functionalities

These functionalities are intented to be used by developers of R packages. Below the basic principle of the functions are explained and it is showed how to use the functions in the context of R package development.

Basic features

The backbone functions of zephyr are msg, msg_debug and msg_success which will collectively be referred to as msg functions in the remainder of this README. They have a common documentation page that can be accessed by ?msg. The purpose of these functions is to write messages to the console dependent on a verbosity_level that can be specified through options. Specifically, as outlined below the message is only written to the console when the verbosity_level is matching a level in levels_to_write.

msg("testing",
    levels_to_write = c("verbose", "debug"),
    verbosity_level = "verbose")
#> ℹ testing

msg("testing",
    levels_to_write = c("verbose", "debug"),
    verbosity_level = "quiet")

Note you are able to control what function to use when writing messages to the console through the the argument msg_fun (default being msg_fun = cli::cli_alert_info), and there are wrapper functions msg_debug and msg_success available (see the documentation in using ?msg) which as default have msg_fun = cli::cli_inform and msg_fun = cli::cli_alert_success, respectively.

Controlling the verbosity level through options

The verbosity level can be specified as an argument withing the function. However, this behavior can be controlled through package level options. By default, verbosity_level = NULL, which means it will fetch a verbosity_level option set in the zephyr package when the function is used ‘directly’, and if the function is used inside another function, it will fetch the verbosity_level option set in the package of the function that called the msg function.

Setting a package option using the options package

Note that much more information about the options package is available in the package’s pkgdown, and here is only provided a the minimal introduction to understand the usage in context of the zephyr package.

In the zephyr package, we have set a package level verbosity_level option by including the following code in a file below /R.

options::define_option(
  option = "verbosity_level",
  default = "verbose",
  desc = "Controls verbosity level in this package (overwritable using option
  `zephyr.verbosity_level` across all packages using `zephyr` functions).
  Options are 'debug', 'verbose' and 'quiet'",
  envir = getNamespace("zephyr")
)
#> 
#> verbosity_level = "verbose"
#> 
#>   Controls verbosity level in this package (overwritable using option
#>   `zephyr.verbosity_level` across all packages using `zephyr`
#>   functions).  Options are 'debug', 'verbose' and 'quiet'
#> 
#>   option  : zephyr.verbosity_level
#>   envvar  : R_ZEPHYR_VERBOSITY_LEVEL (evaluated if possible, raw string otherwise)
#>  *default : "verbose"

When the verbosity_level argument is not specified (i.e. left as verbosity_level = NULL), the msg function will fetch the verbosity_level option set in the zephyr package:

# Will not write a message
withr::with_envvar(list(R_ZEPHYR_VERBOSITY_LEVEL = "quiet"), {
  msg("testing")
})
# Will write a message
withr::with_options(list(zephyr.verbosity_level = "debug"), {
  msg_debug("testing")
})
#> testing
# Default set option is "verbose", so this will also write a message
msg_success("testing")
#> ✔ testing

Usage in R package development

The verbosity_level option can also be specified in a developer’s R package.

When doing so, the behavior of the msg functions will be controlled through that package level option, and users can then easily control the verbosity level in the entire package. By default the msg functions will fetch the verbosity_level option set in the package of the function wherein the msg function is called.

Simulating creation of a package

We create an environment with an option where the verbosity_level have been specified (Note: if looking into the helper script that the option is set differently than described above for a package - when you define an option in your package, use the above approach), and a function foo that uses the msg function:

source("R/test_vignette_helpers.R")
foo_pkg <- create_env_with_fun(
  message = "Hello from foo_pkg!",
  fun_name = "foo",
  fun = function() {
    msg_debug("Inform my user the function is trying to do stuff")
    # Do stuff
    msg_success("Inform my user that stuff succeeded")
  }
)

# foo function
foo_pkg$foo
#> function () 
#> {
#>     msg_debug("Inform my user the function is trying to do stuff")
#>     msg_success("Inform my user that stuff succeeded")
#> }
#> <environment: 0x2f972098>

# Option set in package:
foo_pkg$.options
#> 
#> verbosity_level = NULL
#> 
#>   Option for testing
#> 
#>   option  : foo_pkg.verbosity_level
#>   envvar  : R_FOO_PKG_VERBOSITY_LEVEL (evaluated if possible, raw string otherwise)
#>  *default : default
Default (implicit) behavior when using msg functions in your package

As a default the msg functions will fetch the verbosity_level option set in foo_pkg when calling foo:

# Does not write a message
withr::with_envvar(list(R_FOO_PKG_VERBOSITY_LEVEL = "quiet"), {
  foo_pkg$foo()
})

# Writes a message
withr::with_options(list(foo_pkg.verbosity_level = "debug"), {
  foo_pkg$foo()
})
#> Inform my user the function is trying to do stuff
#> ✔ Inform my user that stuff succeeded

However, a feature of the package (specifically the get_verbosity_level function) is that you can set the verbosity level for zephyr functionalities globally by setting the zephyr.verbosity_level option, which will override individual package level options:

# Writes a message
withr::with_options(list(
  foo_pkg.verbosity_level = "quiet",
  zephyr.verbosity_level = "verbose"
),
{
  foo_pkg$foo()
})
#> ✔ Inform my user that stuff succeeded

Setting an environmental variable of R_ZEPHYR_VERBOSITY_LEVEL will only override the package level option in case the package level option is not set using foo_pkg_verbosity_level:

# Will not write a message since the Zephyr environment variable overrides the package level
withr::with_envvar(list(
  R_ZEPHYR_VERBOSITY_LEVEL = "quiet",
  R_FOO_PKG_VERBOSITY_LEVEL = "verbose"
),
{
  foo_pkg$foo()
})

# Will write a message since option overrides the Zephyr environment variable
withr::with_envvar(list(R_ZEPHYR_VERBOSITY_LEVEL = "quiet"), {
  withr::with_options(list(foo_pkg.verbosity_level = "verbose"), {
    foo_pkg$foo()
  })
})
#> ✔ Inform my user that stuff succeeded
Controlling verbosity level through options with more transparency for the user

The default behavior described can be used to control verbosity level through your package level options without having to specify anything. In this case, write in the documentation of your functions that verbosity level can be controlled through options.

In case a more transparent solution is wanted, a package level option can be set, and then the zephyr::get_verbosity_level(env = getNamespace("foo_pkg")) can be used to set the default value in your function (or the options::opt("verbosity_level", env = getNamespace("foo_pkg")) function in case it’s not wanted to be able to override options “on a global zephyr level”).

When creating a function foo in a package foo_pkg such a solution would look like this:

foo <- function(my_arg,
                verbosity_level = zephyr::get_verbosity_level(env = getNamespace("foo_pkg"))) {
  zephyr::msg_debug("Inform my user the function is trying to do stuff",
                    verbosity_level = verbosity_level)
  # Do stuff
  zephyr::msg_success("Inform my user that stuff succeeded", verbosity_level = verbosity_level)
}

Summary of how to use zephyr in your package

  1. Set a verbosity_level package level option in your package (see the R/package_options.R file in the zephyr package for an example as shown in this earlier section)
  2. Develop your functions to include zephyr functionalities when you want to inform your user - allowing them to specify a verbosity_level directly as an argument or only through options.
  3. Write in the documentation of your functions that verbosity level can be controlled through options - see more about how to easily write reusable documentation from the options package here

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