I was delighted to see the following e-mail post from Dirk Eddelbuettel regarding the google-summer-of-code R google group:

* * *

Earlier today Google finalised student / mentor pairings and allocations for

the Google Summer of Code 2010 (GSoC 2010). The R Project is happy to

announce that the following students have been accepted:

Colin Rundel, “rgeos – an R wrapper for GEOS”, mentored by Roger Bivand of

the Norges Handelshoyskole, Norway

Ian Fellows, “A GUI for Graphics using ggplot2 and Deducer”, mentored by

Hadley Wickham of Rice University, USA

Chidambaram Annamalai, “rdx – Automatic Differentiation in R”, mentored by

John Nash of University of Ottawa, Canada

Yasuhisa Yoshida, “NoSQL interface for R”, mentored by Dirk Eddelbuettel,

Chicago, USA

Felix Schoenbrodt, “Social Relations Analyses in R”, mentored by Stefan

Schmukle, Universitaet Muenster, Germany

Details about all proposals are on the R Wiki page for the GSoC 2010 at

http://rwiki.sciviews.org/doku.php?id=developers:projects:gsoc2010

The R Project is honoured to have received its highest number of student

allocations yet, and looks forward to an exciting Summer of Code. Please

join me in welcoming our new students.

At this time, I would also like to thank all the other students who have

applied for working with R in this Summer of Code. With a limited number of

available slots, not all proposals can be accepted — but I hope that those

not lucky enough to have been granted a slot will continue to work with R and

towards making contributions within the R world.

I would also like to express my thanks to all other mentors who provided for

a record number of proposals. Without mentors and their project ideas we

would not have a Summer of Code — so hopefully we will see you again next

year.

Regards,

Dirk (acting as R/GSoC 2010 admin)

* * *

From all the projects, the one I am most excited about is:

Ian Fellows, “A GUI for Graphics using ggplot2 and Deducer”, mentored by Hadley Wickham of Rice University, USA

Deducer (text from the website) attempts to be a free easy to use alternative to proprietary data analysis software such as SPSS, JMP, and Minitab. It has a menu system to do common data manipulation and analysis tasks, and an excel-like spreadsheet in which to view and edit data frames. The goal of the project is to two-fold.

Provide an intuitive interface so that non-technical users can learn and perform analyses without programming getting in their way.

Increase the efficiency of expert R users when performing common tasks by replacing hundreds of keystrokes with a few mouse clicks. Also, as much as possible the GUI should not get in their way if they just want to do some programming.

Deducer is designed to be used with the Java based R console JGR, though it supports a number of other R environments (e.g. Windows RGUI and RTerm).

This combination (of Deducer and ggplot2) might finally provide the bridge to the layman-statistician that some people recently wrote to be one of R’s weak spots (while other bloogers wrote back that this is o.k., still no one refuted that R doesn’t compete with the point-and-click of softwares like SPSS or JMP.)

I came across Ian in the discussion forums, where he provided very kind help to his package “deducer”. Coupled with having Hadley as his mentor, I am very optimistic about the prospects of seeing this project reaching very high standards.

Very exciting development indeed!

Update: Ian’s proposal is available to view here.

p.s: for some intuition about how a GUI for ggplot2 can look like, have a look at this video of Jeroen Ooms’s ggplot2 web interface