https://github.com/google/rfmt - a formatter which uses Python internally (to get a lexer/yaccer) and they just bundle the Python package.
https://github.com/johnmchambers/XRPython - There is one other thing to look at. John Chambers, R's creator, just had another book out (for which I read a draft). Entitled "Extending R" it is largely about R, its design and then going from R to Julia, Python, C++. He uses this package for the Python interface and has a working package then using Python text processing to mine Shakespeare's collected works. So I am more than "pretty certain" that this will get us proper data sets back.
R> library(rPython)
Loading required package: RJSONIO
R> python.exec( "import math" )
R> python.get( "math.pi" )
[1] 3.14159
https://github.com/vertica/vertica.dplyr - That connect R via dplyr to Vertica ... yet talks about JDBC | ODBC as requirements
https://github.com/uber/vertica-python/ - So in general taking a C(++)-based SDK and building a client is not "that" hard. A decade ago I mentored a Google Summer of Code student for the first Postgres connection to R -- RPostgreSQL. And that was even in plain C. There we just build one source package, and given postgresql libraries on Linux, OS X and Windows get binaries on all OSs. And basically the same thing happens with MySQL, SQLite, ... So I guess I need to look at exactly what Vertica provides in terms of an SDK. Now something like this (by them) is doing exactly that
https://github.com/vertica/r-dataconnector/blob/master/dataconnector/DESCRIPTION
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.