Rcpp version 0.7.0 went onto CRAN this weekend. The key new features are o inline support, taken from Oleg Sklyar's neat inline package and adapted/extented to support Rcpp as well as external libraries (see below for an example); this even works on Windows (provided you have Rtools installed and configured); o addition of a new simple type RcppSexp for importing or exporting simple types directly between R and C++ o addition of a number of new examples for both these features o code reorganisation: every class has in its own header and source file o last but not least relicensed from LGPL (>=2.1) to GPL (>= 2) My blog (http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/blog/) has two recent posts with a bit more details (and colour highlighting of the code below) but let's just look at one example of using GNU GSL functions for illustrative purposes (as you wouldn't need this to access random-number generators as R has its own). Consider this R code snippet: ## use Rcpp to pass down a parameter for the seed, and a vector size gslrng <- ' int seed = RcppSexp(s).asInt(); int len = RcppSexp(n).asInt(); gsl_rng *r; gsl_rng_env_setup(); std::vector v(len); r = gsl_rng_alloc (gsl_rng_default); gsl_rng_set (r, (unsigned long) seed); for (int i=0; i v which is also converted on the fly. 5) The resulting vector is returned and simply printed at the R level. More examples are in the source tarball and in the R-Forge SVN archive.