\name{kinwrite.KinGUI} \Rdversion{1.1} \alias{kinwrite.KinGUI} \encoding{latin1} \title{ Function to write KinGUI input files from kinetic data } \description{ This function takes an R object as used by the \code{kinfit} package and tries to write a text file which is compatible with the KinGUI software tool. } \usage{ kinwrite.KinGUI(kinobject, file, comment=NA) } \arguments{ \item{kinobject}{ A list containing the following elements: The name of the parent compound to be output (\code{parent}), the type of the test system (\code{type}), the name of the specific test system used for generating this dataset (\code{system}), a data frame containing the raw data (\code{data}), which should be in the same form as required by by \code{\link{kinfit}}. } \item{file}{ The filename, potentially including the full path, specifying where the output whould be written. } \item{comment}{ An optional comment that will be integrated in the header of the KinGUI input file. } } \value{ The function is called for its side effect, namely the generation of a text file. } \references{ Schäfer D, Mikolasch M, Rainbird P and Harvey B (2007). KinGUI: a new kinetic software tool for evaluations according to FOCUS degradation kinetics. In: Del Re AAM, Capri E, Fragoulis G and Trevisan M (Eds.). Proceedings of the XIII Symposium Pesticide Chemistry, Piacenza, 2007, p. 916-923. } \note{ The KinGUI software tool was announced to be freely available on CD from the main author of the paper cited above, Dieter Schäfer . } \author{ Johannes Ranke } \keyword{ IO }