| Title: | Ask Yes-No Questions |
| Version: | 0.1.3 |
| Description: | Asks Yes-No questions with variable or custom responses. |
| License: | MIT + file LICENSE |
| URL: | https://github.com/poissonconsulting/yesno, https://poissonconsulting.github.io/yesno/ |
| BugReports: | https://github.com/poissonconsulting/yesno/issues |
| Depends: | R (≥ 3.4) |
| Imports: | utils |
| Suggests: | testthat (≥ 3.0.0) |
| Config/testthat/edition: | 3 |
| Encoding: | UTF-8 |
| RoxygenNote: | 7.3.2 |
| NeedsCompilation: | no |
| Packaged: | 2024-07-26 21:31:36 UTC; aylapearson |
| Author: | Ayla Pearson |
| Maintainer: | Ayla Pearson <ayla@poissonconsulting.ca> |
| Repository: | CRAN |
| Date/Publication: | 2024-07-26 23:20:02 UTC |
Yes No with Variable Responses
Description
Asks a custom yes-no question with randomly varying responses. Returns a flag indicating whether the user answered yes or no. It is designed to be used in situations where the users needs to confirm an affirmative action.
Usage
yesno(...)
Arguments
... |
Objects to paste and then output to produce the question. |
Details
The objects are first pasted without separators
and collapsed using [paste0](..., collapse = "")
before being output using cat().
The order and phrasing of the possible responses varies randomly to ensure the user consciously chooses (as opposed to automatically types their response).
A total of three responses are offered - two of which correspond to No and one of which corresponds to Yes. The possible responses are skewed to No to reduce the chances that a blindly-typing user mistakenly chooses an affirmative action. For the same reason, selection of uncertain responses such as 'Uhhh... Maybe?' is considered to be a No. Selection of a 0 (to exit) is also considered to be No. Questions should be phrased accordingly.
Value
A flag indicating whether the user answered yes or no.
See Also
Examples
## Not run:
yesno("Do you like ", R.Version()$nickname, "?")
## End(Not run)
Yes No with Two Custom Responses
Description
Asks a custom yes-no question with two responses (by default 'Yes' or 'No'). Returns a flag indicating which response the user choose. It is designed to be used in situations where a user needs to choose one of two affirmative options.
Usage
yesno2(..., yes = "Yes", no = "No")
Arguments
... |
Objects to paste and then output to produce the question. |
yes |
A string of the first response. |
no |
A string of the second response. |
Details
The objects are first pasted without separators
and collapsed using [paste0](..., collapse = "")
before being output using cat().
Selection of a 0 (to exit) causes the code to throw an error.
Value
A flag indicating whether the user selected the first (TRUE) or second (FALSE) response.
See Also
Examples
## Not run:
yesno2("Do you like this question?", yes = "I really do")
## End(Not run)