![]() I have installed separate (non-Universal) binaries of fd, ripgrep, bat and a few others and almost have a working Rust toolchain up (both Rust and Go are very close to stable on Apple’s M1 architecture). a bunch of self-contained, C-backed or just base R-backed stats packages. ![]() Homebrew is pretty much feature complete on Big Sur (for Intel-architecture Macs) and I’ve run everything from the This was problematic for a few months, but Apple has been pretty consistent keeping it version-stable with Xcode-proper. The Xcode command-line tools are finally in a stable state and can be used instead of the massive Xcode.app installation. While not completely necessary, it may save some debugging (or clicks of “OK”) down the road. apps into both “Developer Tools” and “Full Disk Access” in the Security & Privacy preferences pane. To be on the safe side, I highly recommend putting the R command-line binaries and RStudio and R-GUI. ![]() However, despite making Simon’s life a bit more difficult (re: notarization of R binaries) I’m happy to report that R 4.0.3 and the latest RStudio 1.4 daily releases work great on Big Sur. I’m even on the latest beta (11.1b1) as I type this post.Īpple picked away at many nits that they introduced with Big Sur, but it’s still more of a “Vista” release than Catalina was given all the clicks involved with installing new software. Stay to the end for an early Christmas ! Big Sur ReportĪs #rstats + #macOS Twitter-folks know (before my permanent read hiatus began), I’ve been on Big Sur since the very first developer betas were out. It’s been a while since I’ve posted anything R-related and, while this one will be brief, it may be of use to some R folks who have taken the leap into Big Sur and/or Apple Silicon.
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