Run both S-PLUS 2000 for Windows and S-PLUS 5 for Linuxin NTEmacs.

Rich Heiberger rmh at surfer.sbm.temple.edu
Fri Jan 12 06:00:02 CET 2001


I'm sorry I misunderstood your original question.  This is emacs, so the
answer is "of course".  Use M-x S+elsewhere.  this gives you a shell that
thinks is an iESS buffer.  telnet to the other machine from that new buffer
and start S-Plus on the linux machine.  All the usual C-c C-n and related
commands work from the myfile.s buffers in your emacs to the S-Plus on the
remote machine.

Graphics from the other machine is also possible.  Use the postscript()
device.  Then open up a dired on the other machine with
  C-x d /loginname at other.machine:path
Use the ordinary C to copy the myfile.ps to your PC, and then gsview on the
Windows machine to view the postscript file.  Remember to close the 
postscript() device with dev.off() before doing the copy.


We also have a more general M-x ESS-elsewhere.  It doesn't work as well for
me as the simpler S+elsewhere.

Rich
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