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% File src/library/utils/man/person.Rd
% Part of the R package, https://www.R-project.org
% Copyright 1995-2015 R Core Team
% Distributed under GPL 2 or later
\name{person}
\title{Persons}
\alias{person}
\alias{as.person}
\alias{as.person.default}
\alias{[.person}
\alias{$.person}
\alias{as.character.person}
\alias{c.person}
\alias{format.person}
\alias{print.person}
\alias{toBibtex.person}
\alias{personList}
\alias{as.personList}
\alias{as.personList.person}
\alias{as.personList.default}
\description{
A class and utility methods for holding information about persons
like name and email address.
}
\usage{
person(given = NULL, family = NULL, middle = NULL,
email = NULL, role = NULL, comment = NULL,
first = NULL, last = NULL)
\method{as.person}{default}(x)
\method{format}{person}(x,
include = c("given", "family", "email", "role", "comment"),
braces = list(given = "", family = "", email = c("<", ">"),
role = c("[", "]"), comment = c("(", ")")),
collapse = list(given = " ", family = " ", email = ", ",
role = ", ", comment = ", "),
...,
style = c("text", "R")
)
}
\arguments{
\item{given}{a character vector with the \emph{given} names,
or a list thereof.}
\item{family}{a character string with the \emph{family} name,
or a list thereof.}
\item{middle}{a character string with the collapsed middle name(s).
Deprecated, see \bold{Details}.}
\item{email}{a character string (or vector) giving an e-mail address
(each),
or a list thereof.}
\item{role}{a character vector specifying the role(s) of the person
(see \bold{Details}),
or a list thereof.}
\item{comment}{a character string (or vector) providing comments,
or a list thereof.}
\item{first}{a character string giving the first name.
Deprecated, see \bold{Details}.}
\item{last}{a character string giving the last name.
Deprecated, see \bold{Details}.}
\item{x}{a character string for the \code{as.person} default method;
an object of class \code{"person"} otherwise.}
\item{include}{a character vector giving the fields to be included
when formatting.}
\item{braces}{a list of characters (see \bold{Details}).}
\item{collapse}{a list of characters (see \bold{Details}).}
\item{\dots}{currently not used.}
\item{style}{a character string specifying the print style, with
\code{"R"} yielding formatting as R code.}
}
\value{
\code{person()} and \code{as.person()} return objects of class
\code{"person"}.
}
\details{
Objects of class \code{"person"} can hold information about an
arbitrary positive number of persons. These can be obtained by one
call to \code{person()} with list arguments, or by first creating
objects representing single persons and combining these via
\code{c()}.
The \code{format()} method collapses information about persons into
character vectors (one string for each person): the fields in
\code{include} are selected, each collapsed to a string using the
respective element of \code{collapse} and subsequently
\dQuote{embraced} using the respective element of \code{braces}, and
finally collapsed into one string separated by white space. If
\code{braces} and/or \code{collapse} do not specify characters for all
fields, the defaults shown in the usage are imputed.
If \code{collapse} is \code{FALSE} or \code{NA} the corresponding
field is not collapsed but only the first element is used.
The \code{print()} method calls the \code{format()} method and prints
the result, the \code{toBibtex()} method creates a suitable BibTeX
representation.
Person objects can be subscripted by fields (using \code{$}) or by
position (using \code{[}).
\code{as.person()} is a generic function. Its default method tries to
reverse the default person formatting, and can also handle formatted
person entries collapsed by comma or \code{"and"} (with appropriate
white space).
Personal names are rather tricky, e.g.,
\url{https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_name}.
The current implementation (starting from R 2.12.0) of the
\code{"person"} class uses the notions of \emph{given} (including
middle names) and \emph{family} names, as specified by \code{given}
and \code{family} respectively. Earlier versions used a scheme based
on first, middle and last names, as appropriate for most of Western
culture where the given name precedes the family name, but not
universal, as some other cultures place it after the family name, or
use no family name. To smooth the transition to the new scheme,
arguments \code{first}, \code{middle} and \code{last} are still
supported, but their use is deprecated and they must not be given in
combination with the corresponding new style arguments. For persons
which are not natural persons (e.g., institutions, companies, etc.) it
is appropriate to use \code{given} (but not \code{family}) for the
name, e.g., \code{person("R Core Team", role = "aut")}.
The new scheme also adds the possibility of specifying \emph{roles}
based on a subset of the MARC Code List for Relators
(\url{https://www.loc.gov/marc/relators/relaterm.html}).
When giving the roles of persons in the context of authoring \R
packages, the following usage is suggested.
\describe{
\item{\code{"aut"}}{(Author) Use for full authors who have made
substantial contributions to the package and should show up in the
package citation.}
\item{\code{"com"}}{(Compiler) Use for persons who collected code
(potentially in other languages) but did not make further
substantial contributions to the package.}
\item{\code{"cph"}}{(Copyright holder) Use for all copyright holders.}
\item{\code{"cre"}}{(Creator) Use for the package maintainer.}
\item{\code{"ctb"}}{(Contributor) Use for authors who have made
smaller contributions (such as code patches etc.) but should not
show up in the package citation.}
\item{\code{"ctr"}}{(Contractor) Use for authors who have been
contracted to write (parts of) the package and hence do not own
intellectual property.}
\item{\code{"dtc"}}{(Data contributor) Use for persons who
contributed data sets for the package.}
\item{\code{"fnd"}}{(Funder) Use for persons or organizations that
furnished financial support for the development of the package.}
\item{\code{"rev"}}{(Reviewer) Use for persons or organizations
responsible for reviewing (parts of) the package.}
\item{\code{"ths"}}{(Thesis advisor) If the package is part of a
thesis, use for the thesis advisor.}
\item{\code{"trl"}}{(Translator) If the R code is a translation from
another language (typically S), use for the translator to R.}
}
In the old scheme, person objects were used for single persons, and a
separate \code{"personList"} class with corresponding creator
\code{personList()} for collections of these. The new scheme employs
a single class for information about an arbitrary positive number of
persons, eliminating the need for the \code{personList} mechanism.
The \code{comment} field can be used for \dQuote{arbitrary} additional
information about persons. Elements named \code{"ORCID"} will be
taken to give ORCID identifiers (see \url{https://orcid.org/} for more
information), and be displayed as the corresponding URIs by the
\code{print()} and \code{format()} methods (see \bold{Examples}
below).
}
\seealso{
\code{\link{citation}}
}
\keyword{misc}
\examples{
## Create a person object directly ...
p1 <- person("Karl", "Pearson", email = "pearson@stats.heaven")
## ... or convert a string.
p2 <- as.person("Ronald Aylmer Fisher")
## Combining and subsetting.
p <- c(p1, p2)
p[1]
p[-1]
## Extracting fields.
p$family
p$email
p[1]$email
## Specifying package authors, example from "boot":
## AC is the first author [aut] who wrote the S original.
## BR is the second author [aut], who translated the code to R [trl],
## and maintains the package [cre].
b <- c(person("Angelo", "Canty", role = "aut", comment =
"S original, <http://statwww.epfl.ch/davison/BMA/library.html>"),
person(c("Brian", "D."), "Ripley", role = c("aut", "trl", "cre"),
comment = "R port", email = "ripley@stats.ox.ac.uk")
)
b
## Formatting.
format(b)
format(b, include = c("family", "given", "role"),
braces = list(family = c("", ","), role = c("(Role(s): ", ")")))
## Conversion to BibTeX author field.
paste(format(b, include = c("given", "family")), collapse = " and ")
toBibtex(b)
## ORCID identifiers.
(p3 <- person("Achim", "Zeileis",
comment = c(ORCID = "0000-0003-0918-3766")))
}