There are some things that I wish were easier with the 'stringr' or 'stringi' packages. The foremost of these is the extraction of numbers from strings. 'stringr' and 'stringi' make you figure out the regular expression for yourself; 'strex' takes care of this for you. There are many other handy functionalities in 'strex'. Contributions to this package are encouraged; it is intended as a miscellany of string manipulation functions that cannot be found in 'stringi' or 'stringr'.
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Dependency Anatomy Guide
Understanding Dependency Borders
Dependencies are visually distinguished by their border styles to help you understand their relationship to the current package:
Direct Dependencies
Thick solid border: These are dependencies directly specified in the package's DESCRIPTION file (Depends, Imports, Enhances, or LinkingTo).
Recursive Dependencies
Thin solid border: These are dependencies of dependencies (recursive/indirect dependencies). They are initially hidden but can be toggled with the switch button.
Version Constraint Conflicts
Thick border + Info icon: When both direct and recursive dependencies exist for the same package with different version constraints. This indicates the "true" version constraint for the package, as the recursive dependency requires the more strict version constraint.
Understanding the Info Icon
The yellow info circle appears when there are version constraint conflicts between direct and recursive dependencies for the same package. This helps give a more accurate picture of the version constraints for the dependencies of a given package.
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