add-rcpp-integration
About
This skill adds Rcpp or RcppArmadillo integration to an R package to enable high-performance C++ code for bottlenecks, library interfacing, or complex algorithms. It guides developers through setup, writing C++ functions, generating RcppExports, and testing compiled code. Use it when profiling confirms an R function is too slow or you need to leverage compiled code for loops, recursion, or linear algebra.
Quick Install
Claude Code
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Documentation
Add Rcpp Integration
Integrate C++ code into an R package using Rcpp for performance-critical operations.
When to Use
- R function is too slow and profiling confirms a bottleneck
- Need to interface with existing C/C++ libraries
- Implementing algorithms that benefit from compiled code (loops, recursion)
- Adding RcppArmadillo for linear algebra operations
Inputs
- Required: Existing R package
- Required: R function to replace or augment with C++
- Optional: External C++ library to interface with
- Optional: Whether to use RcppArmadillo (default: plain Rcpp)
Procedure
Step 1: Set Up Rcpp Infrastructure
usethis::use_rcpp()
This:
- Creates
src/directory - Adds
Rcppto LinkingTo and Imports in DESCRIPTION - Creates
R/packagename-package.Rwith@useDynLiband@importFrom Rcpp sourceCpp - Updates
.gitignorefor compiled files
For RcppArmadillo:
usethis::use_rcpp_armadillo()
Got: src/ directory created, DESCRIPTION updated with Rcpp in LinkingTo and Imports, and R/packagename-package.R contains @useDynLib directive.
If fail: If usethis::use_rcpp() fails, manually create src/, add LinkingTo: Rcpp and Imports: Rcpp to DESCRIPTION, and add #' @useDynLib packagename, .registration = TRUE and #' @importFrom Rcpp sourceCpp to the package-level documentation file.
Step 2: Write C++ Function
Create src/my_function.cpp:
#include <Rcpp.h>
using namespace Rcpp;
//' Compute cumulative sum efficiently
//'
//' @param x A numeric vector
//' @return A numeric vector of cumulative sums
//' @export
// [[Rcpp::export]]
NumericVector cumsum_cpp(NumericVector x) {
int n = x.size();
NumericVector out(n);
out[0] = x[0];
for (int i = 1; i < n; i++) {
out[i] = out[i - 1] + x[i];
}
return out;
}
For RcppArmadillo:
#include <RcppArmadillo.h>
// [[Rcpp::depends(RcppArmadillo)]]
//' Matrix multiplication using Armadillo
//'
//' @param A A numeric matrix
//' @param B A numeric matrix
//' @return The matrix product A * B
//' @export
// [[Rcpp::export]]
arma::mat mat_mult(const arma::mat& A, const arma::mat& B) {
return A * B;
}
Got: C++ source file exists at src/my_function.cpp with valid // [[Rcpp::export]] annotation and roxygen-style //' documentation comments.
If fail: Verify the file uses #include <Rcpp.h> (or <RcppArmadillo.h> for Armadillo), that the export annotation is on its own line directly above the function signature, and that return types map to valid Rcpp types.
Step 3: Generate RcppExports
Rcpp::compileAttributes()
devtools::document()
Got: R/RcppExports.R and src/RcppExports.cpp generated automatically.
If fail: Check C++ syntax errors. Ensure // [[Rcpp::export]] tag is present above each exported function.
Step 4: Verify Compilation
devtools::load_all()
Got: Package compiles and loads without errors.
If fail: Check compiler output for errors. Common issues:
- Missing system headers: Install development libraries
- Syntax errors: C++ compiler messages point to the line
- Missing
Rcpp::dependsattribute for RcppArmadillo
Step 5: Write Tests for Compiled Code
test_that("cumsum_cpp matches base R", {
x <- c(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
expect_equal(cumsum_cpp(x), cumsum(x))
})
test_that("cumsum_cpp handles edge cases", {
expect_equal(cumsum_cpp(numeric(0)), numeric(0))
expect_equal(cumsum_cpp(c(NA_real_, 1)), c(NA_real_, NA_real_))
})
Got: Tests pass, confirming the C++ function produces identical results to the R equivalent and handles edge cases (empty vectors, NA values) correctly.
If fail: If tests fail on NA handling, add explicit NA checks in the C++ code using NumericVector::is_na(). If tests fail on empty input, add a guard clause for zero-length vectors at the top of the function.
Step 6: Add Cleanup Script
Create src/Makevars:
PKG_CXXFLAGS = -O2
Create cleanup in package root (for CRAN):
#!/bin/sh
rm -f src/*.o src/*.so src/*.dll
Make executable: chmod +x cleanup
Got: src/Makevars sets compiler flags and cleanup script removes compiled objects. Both files exist at the package root level.
If fail: Verify cleanup has execute permissions (chmod +x cleanup) and that Makevars uses tabs (not spaces) for indentation if adding Makefile-style rules.
Step 7: Update .Rbuildignore
Ensure compiled artifacts are handled:
^src/.*\.o$
^src/.*\.so$
^src/.*\.dll$
Got: .Rbuildignore patterns prevent compiled object files from being included in the package tarball, while preserving source files and Makevars.
If fail: Run devtools::check() and look for NOTEs about unexpected files in src/. Adjust .Rbuildignore patterns to exclude only .o, .so, and .dll files.
Validation
-
devtools::load_all()compiles without warnings - Compiled function produces correct results
- Tests pass for edge cases (NA, empty, large inputs)
-
R CMD checkpasses with no compilation warnings - RcppExports files are generated and committed
- Performance improvement confirmed with benchmarks
Pitfalls
- Forgetting
compileAttributes(): Must regenerate RcppExports after changing C++ files - Integer overflow: Use
doubleinstead ofintfor large numeric values - Memory management: Rcpp handles memory automatically for Rcpp types; don't manually
delete - NA handling: C++ doesn't know about R's NA. Check with
Rcpp::NumericVector::is_na() - Platform portability: Avoid platform-specific C++ features. Test on Windows, macOS, and Linux.
- Missing
@useDynLib: The package-level doc must include@useDynLib packagename, .registration = TRUE
Related Skills
create-r-package- package setup before adding Rcppwrite-testthat-tests- testing compiled functionssetup-github-actions-ci- CI must have C++ toolchainsubmit-to-cran- compiled packages need extra CRAN checks
GitHub Repository
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