-
conflict_scout()
refers to the package where the function was defined, for reexported functions (#93). -
conflict_scout()
no longer returns functions whose conflicts have been resolved manually or automatically (#95).
-
New
conflicts_prefer()
to easily declare multiple preferences at once:conflicts_prefer(dplyr::filter, lubridate::week, ...)
(#82). -
Disambiguation message now provides clickable preferences (#74).
-
Conflicts now take into account the
include.only
andexclude
arguments that you might have specified inlibrary()
(#84). -
conflict_prefer_all()
andconflict_prefer_matching()
are now much faster. And whenlosers
is supplied, they only register the minimal necessary number of conflicts.
-
New
conflicted_prefer_all()
andconflicted_prefer_matching()
to prefer functions en masse (#51). -
Improvements to conflict detection and resolution:
-
Reports conflicts involving lazy loaded datasets (#54).
-
Don't report conflicts involving a
standardGeneric
(#47). -
Better handling of conflicts cleared by superset principle: if there is a conflict all functions (including any base functions) are reported, and if there isn't a conflict, no packages are reported (instead of 1) (#47).
-
Don't report conflict between a function and a non-function (#30).
-
Conflicts involving a primitive function no longer error (@nerskin, #46, #48).
-
- Fixes for dev rlang
- Fix > vs >= mistake
- Align with changes to R 3.6
-
Internal
has_moved()
function no longer fails when it encounters a call to.Deprecated()
with no arguments (#29). -
.conflicts
environment is correctly removed and replaced each time a new package is loaded (#28).
-
conflict_scout()
reports all conflicts found with a set of packages. -
conflict_prefer()
allows you to declare a persistent preference (within a session) for one function over another (#4).
-
conflicts now generally expects packages that override functions in base packages to obey the "superset principle", i.e. that
foo::bar(...)
must return the same value ofbase::bar(...)
whenever the input is not an error. In other words, if you override a base function you can only extend the API, not change or reduce it.There are two exceptions. If the arguments of the two functions are not compatible (i.e. the function in the package doesn't include all arguments of the base package), conflicts can tell it doesn't follow the superset principle. Additionally,
dplyr::lag()
fails to follow the superset principle, and is marked as a special case (#2). -
Functions that have moved between packages (i.e. functions with a call to
.Deprecated("pkg::foo")
) as the first element of the function body) will never generate conflicts. -
conflicted now listens for
detach()
events and removes conflicts that are removed by detaching a package (#5)
- Error messages for infix functions and non-syntactic function names are improved (#14)