I'm trying to install the "factoextra" package using a local source tar ball on Windows. I can install other packages in the same way with no problem. However, when installing "factoextra", I get an error relating to S3methods.
I have tried using local windows binaries, installing the latest Rtools and made sure I have all the dependencies installed. I have also tried to use archived versions of the package.
install.packages('D:\\R_Packages\\Packages\\factoextra_1.0.5.tar.gz', repos = NULL, type="source")
* installing *source* package 'factoextra' ...
** package 'factoextra' successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked
** R
** data
*** moving datasets to lazyload DB
** byte-compile and prepare package for lazy loading
Error in rbind(info, getNamespaceInfo(env, "S3methods")) :
number of columns of matrices must match (see arg 2)
ERROR: lazy loading failed for package 'factoextra'
* removing 'D:/R-3.5.2/library/factoextra'
In R CMD INSTALL
Warning in install.packages :
installation of package ‘D:/R_Packages/Packages/factoextra_1.0.5.tar.gz’ had non-zero exit status
I really just need this package to install.
I found this thread: http://r.789695.n4.nabble.com/Error-in-rbind-info-getNamespaceInfo-env-quot-S3methods-quot-td4755490.html, which leads me to how I solved a similar issue on my machine.
I found that a broken version of the package was installed on my system and had to be removed manually before I could install a clean version.
Find if and where
factoextra
is installed (it might be on your system, just outdated or broken):If it's there already (just broken), you can try to remove it with:
If
remove.packages()
fails even thoughfind.packages()
says the package is there, use the path returned byfind.packages()
to use your OS' file system to find and delete the package - just be careful only to delete stuff you know is broken.Once the old, broken package is removed, use
install.packages("factoextra")
and it should work.I had several packages that were broken in this way. If that's the case for you, you can identify which packages to remove and install this way by using something like:
This will print out any packages that have the same issue. I would suggest removing all broken packages before trying to use
install.packages()
again.