Martin Wegmann
2003-Dec-16 13:17 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
Dear R-user, I already received quite a lot of replies to this mail and like to do a preliminary sum up. A few were sceptical about the use of such a beginner mailing list. The arguments were that people starting with R will only stay subscribed for a short time until they reached the R-help "level" and therefore only beginner will teach beginner how to use R. But as far as I can judge, the majority of people who replied to this mail are medium to experienced user who like to help beginner but does not call themselves highly experienced user as the main "answerers" on the R-help mailing list. Therefore I assume that, even though some answers might be wrong, the threat of possibly wrong answers might be minimal, due to various experienced users who like to subsribe to this list. The majority of replies were positive about such a list and welcomed the idea to encourage new user by providing a basic R mailing list, like the already existent corresponding manuals in the contributed documentation at r-project.org. And again, this list shall only provide a basic and smooth introduction into R and its capabilities. Questions like; "How do I make my labels in a graphic bigger? - How do I change the colour? - etc." are welcome and surely would annoy the majority of R-help user because it is mentioned somewhere on the first 10 pages of every manual, but people who are used to click on a graphic and change it in a second would not be convinced that R can do great graphics. well, I would welcome if there would be more discussion about it or to give it a try (perhaps mention it on the r-project web-site) and look how productive this mailing list proves to be. The address of the R-beginner mailing list is: https://lists.uni-wuerzburg.de/mailman/listinfo/r-beginner best regards, Martin -- Neu: Preissenkung f?r MMS und FreeMMS! http://www.gmx.net
Sung, Iyue
2003-Dec-16 13:32 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
I think a separate list is redundant. Many basic questions do get answered. My impression is that *who* is asking, determines the response. A poli-sci student asking the same question as a more (presumably) technically resourceful, say CS person, is more likely to get a helpful response, vs a flame. The simple questions doesn't bother me, I just ignore them. But, it's not my list and I can see how they may bother the list maintainers and 'regular' experts. But I think it's futile (and not worth the raised blood pressure) to get too hot and bothered about those postings. Just my opinion. - Iyue> -----Original Message----- > From: Martin Wegmann [mailto:wegmann_mailinglist at gmx.net] > Sent: Tuesday, December 16, 2003 8:18 AM > To: R-list > Subject: Re: [R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up > > > Dear R-user, > > I already received quite a lot of replies to this mail and > like to do a > preliminary sum up. > > A few were sceptical about the use of such a beginner mailing list. > The arguments were that people starting with R will only stay > subscribed for > a short time > until they reached the R-help "level" and therefore only > beginner will teach > beginner how to > use R. > > But as far as I can judge, the majority of people who replied > to this mail > are medium to > experienced user who like to help beginner but does not call > themselves > highly > experienced user as the main "answerers" on the R-help mailing list. > > Therefore I assume that, even though some answers might be > wrong, the threat > of > possibly wrong answers might be minimal, due to various > experienced users > who like to > subsribe to this list. > > The majority of replies were positive about such a list and > welcomed the > idea to > encourage new user by providing a basic R mailing list, like > the already > existent > corresponding manuals in the contributed documentation at > r-project.org. > > And again, this list shall only provide a basic and smooth > introduction into > R and its > capabilities. > Questions like; "How do I make my labels in a graphic bigger? > - How do I > change the > colour? - etc." are welcome and surely would annoy the > majority of R-help > user because it > is mentioned somewhere on the first 10 pages of every manual, > but people who > are used > to click on a graphic and change it in a second would not be > convinced that > R can do > great graphics. > > well, I would welcome if there would be more discussion about > it or to give > it a try > (perhaps mention it on the r-project web-site) and look how > productive this > mailing list > proves to be. > The address of the R-beginner mailing list is: > > https://lists.uni-wuerzburg.de/mailman/listinfo/r-beginner > > best regards, Martin > > > -- > > Neu: Preissenkung f?r MMS und FreeMMS! http://www.gmx.net > > ______________________________________________ > R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list > https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help >"Secure Server" made the following annotations on 12/16/2003 08:33:16 AM ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "This e-mail, including attachments, may include confidential and/or proprietary information, and may be used only by the person or entity to which it is addressed. If the reader of this e-mail is not the intended recipient or his or her authorized agent, the reader is hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this e-mail is prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender by replying to this message and delete this e-mail immediately."
Pascal A. Niklaus
2003-Dec-16 15:09 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
Martin Wegmann wrote:>Dear R-user, > >I already received quite a lot of replies to this mail and like to do a >preliminary sum up. > >A few were sceptical about the use of such a beginner mailing list. >The arguments were that people starting with R will only stay subscribed for >a short time >until they reached the R-help "level" and therefore only beginner will teach >beginner how to >use R. > >But as far as I can judge, the majority of people who replied to this mail >are medium to >experienced user who like to help beginner but does not call themselves >highly >experienced user as the main "answerers" on the R-help mailing list. > >Therefore I assume that, even though some answers might be wrong, the threat > of >possibly wrong answers might be minimal, due to various experienced users >who like to >subsribe to this list. > >The majority of replies were positive about such a list and welcomed the >idea to >encourage new user by providing a basic R mailing list, like the already >existent >corresponding manuals in the contributed documentation at r-project.org. > >And again, this list shall only provide a basic and smooth introduction into >R and its >capabilities. >Questions like; "How do I make my labels in a graphic bigger? - How do I >change the >colour? - etc." are welcome and surely would annoy the majority of R-help >user because it >is mentioned somewhere on the first 10 pages of every manual, but people who >are used >to click on a graphic and change it in a second would not be convinced that >R can do >great graphics. > >well, I would welcome if there would be more discussion about it or to give >it a try >(perhaps mention it on the r-project web-site) and look how productive this >mailing list >proves to be. >The address of the R-beginner mailing list is: > >https://lists.uni-wuerzburg.de/mailman/listinfo/r-beginner > >best regards, Martin >Myself being relatively new to R, I'd like to comment on the idea of a new list: - In my experience even *very* basic questions *relating to the R language* do get answered on r-help. I'm impressed by how much time some members of the R core team spend answering relatively basic questions, and by how elaborate their answers generally are. So I cannot see much need for a new R mailing list. There are these excellent mailing list archives, so why "fragment" this list? - The kind of questions that generally do not get answered are the ones which involve statistical issues ("What is the appropriate model for my data?", "what is the difference between lm and aov?", "Is that model correct?" etc...). Since many beginners to R are probably also beginners in statistics, I could see some need for a list dedicated to statistical topics somehow related to R. For example, many people new to R seem to have problems adapting some basic mixed-effects models and repeated measures analyses they ran in SAS od SPSS. These kind of questions generally do not get answered, and some hints on how to adapt some of the examples in Pinheiro & Bates could be helpful. But this is unlikely to happen on a separate r-beginner list too. Pascal
Gabor Grothendieck
2003-Dec-16 16:39 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
If the archives were placed on www.r-project.org then googling for whatever site:r-project.org would find anything in them along with anything already on the site. --- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 2003 10:31:32 -0500 From: Jonathan Baron <baron at psych.upenn.edu> To: Pascal A. Niklaus <Pascal.Niklaus at unibas.ch> Cc: <r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch> Subject: Re: [R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up On 12/16/03 16:09, Pascal A. Niklaus wrote:>- In my experience even *very* basic questions *relating to the R >language* do get answered on r-help. I'm impressed by how much time some >members of the R core team spend answering relatively basic questions, >and by how elaborate their answers generally are. So I cannot see much >need for a new R mailing list. There are these excellent mailing list >archives, so why "fragment" this list?Yikes! I now realize that my initial support of the idea for the list must be qualified considerably. If this list is started, its archives become quite important. Who will do that? And will I have the time/energy/inclination to incorporate it into my own search database? I'd rather not have one more thing to do. But if the list gets off the ground - and it seems already at least close to the end of the runway - I'll have to do it eventually in order to have a complete archive. Jon -- Jonathan Baron, Professor of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania Home page: http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~baron R page: http://finzi.psych.upenn.edu/ ______________________________________________ R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help --- On Tue 12/16, Jonathan Baron < baron at psych.upenn.edu > wrote: From: Jonathan Baron [mailto: baron at psych.upenn.edu] To: Pascal.Niklaus at unibas.ch Cc: r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch Date: Tue, 16 Dec 2003 10:31:32 -0500 Subject: Re: [R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up On 12/16/03 16:09, Pascal A. Niklaus wrote:<br>>- In my experience even *very* basic questions *relating to the R<br>>language* do get answered on r-help. I'm impressed by how much time some<br>>members of the R core team spend answering relatively basic questions,<br>>and by how elaborate their answers generally are. So I cannot see much<br>>need for a new R mailing list. There are these excellent mailing list<br>>archives, so why "fragment" this list?<br><br>Yikes! I now realize that my initial support of the idea for the<br>list must be qualified considerably. If this list is started,<br>its archives become quite important. Who will do that? And will<br>I have the time/energy/inclination to incorporate it into my own<br>search database? I'd rather not have one more thing to do. But<br>if the list gets off the ground - and it seems already at least<br>close to the end of the runway - I'll have to do it eventually in<br>order to have a complete archive.<br><br>Jon<br>-- <br>Jonathan Baron, Professor of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania<br>Home page: http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~baron<br>R page: http://finzi.psych.upenn.edu/<br><br>______________________________________________<br>R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list<br>https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help<br>
Richard A. O'Keefe
2003-Dec-17 04:39 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
My experience in several mailing lists and newsgroups has been that "help" from other beginners very often deserves the scare quotes. The advice is often extremely bad. The situation for R is quite different: R has the best documentation I've ever seen for any open-source package, and it's better than most commercial software I've had to deal with. The R web site has pointers to some really excellent stuff. For example, while "S Poetry" is about S rather than R, a lot of "programming" questions about R have clear explanations in that book. There are several tutorials, and the ones I looked at were good. There are a few things about using R with a particular operating system or window manager that are best shown in person. But apart from that, I'm wondering what kind of beginner questions there might be that beginners would be able to help with that aren't already in the tutorials &c. A beginner who can say "I have read <this>, <that>, and <the other> and tried the on-line help, and I didn't recognise the answer to <my problem>" is likely to get prompt and accurate help in this mailing list. The books I've relied on for actually doing statistics have mainly been "Statistical Models in S" and "Modern Applied Statistics with S", and again, they really do answer a lot of questions. Hmm. I seem to have argued myself into the position that IF the rule in the beginner list were that anyone purporting to answer a question should justify the answer by citing the relevant R documentation or one of the commonly mentioned books about S and R, THEN it could be as educational for the answerer as for the questioner and quite helpful after all.
Gabor Grothendieck
2003-Dec-17 04:43 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
My personal view on this is that there is need for a friendly list with a more "customer service" attitude than r-help. r-help is really very useful but its also intimidating and I bet lots of people have questions that they never ask for fear of the response. Maybe some of them even decide not to learn R. --- Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2003 00:49:15 +0100 From: Martin Wegmann <wegmann_mailinglist at gmx.net> To: Spencer Graves <spencer.graves at pdf.com>, <rossini at u.washington.edu> Cc: <r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch> Subject: Re: [R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up Hello, I agree completely that well thought out questions are important to receive good and quick replies and I agree as well that the replies on the R-help list are very good and helpful. But I had to learn and I am still learing how to write good questions and appreciate Spencer's explanantion how a good question should look like in his opinion. I am not sure how this new mailing list might evolve. It might be that the R-beginner list takes some load of the R-help list by reducing the amount of "basic" questions which won't be questioned anymore here (what aren't many) and that new user might be taught to post "good" question before they start posting to R-help. If it proves to be ineffective or might affect R-help in some unwanted manner it would be an easy one to shut it down. I doubt that it will split the R-help list - in my opinion it is unlikely that medium/experienced R user who will subscribe to R-beginner will unsubscribe from the R-help list. Moreover people starting with R are less likely to send any mails to this list, some do and are refered in most cases to the manuals. When I started R I looked through the archive and because I did not understand even one question, I was intimidated by this list and did not send any mail until a few weeks later (that was not because of the statistics but the commands) For this kind of people the R-beginner list is thought - to encourage them to send "stupid" questions during their first steps in R. They shall recognize questions they would have asked themselves. Therefore I think that the quality of the question is in this case less important than it's level. I hope I did not misunderstood some points ,-) best regards Martin On Tuesday 16 December 2003 17:20, Spencer Graves wrote:> I agree with Tony's observation that well thought out questions > are more likely to receive an answer than something that is long, > rambling, and poorly focused. Many questions take more time to read > than I have available, so I don't bother. I like questions that include > toy examples in a few lines of code that I can copy from an email into R > and test ideas. Careful formatting that looks pretty in an email is an > obstacle for me, because it increases the work required to get it into > R. Many questioners could answer their own problems in the process of > generating such a toy example. When they can't, that exercise helps > them focus the question, which makes it easier for potential respondents > to understand the problem and reply. Without that, I must either > generate a toy example myself (which I've done many times) or respond > with untested code and risk looking stupid when my untested suggestion > doesn't work. > > hope this helps. > spencer graves > > A.J. Rossini wrote: > >"Pascal A. Niklaus" <Pascal.Niklaus at unibas.ch> writes: > >>- In my experience even *very* basic questions *relating to the R > >>language* do get answered on r-help. I'm impressed by how much time > >>some members of the R core team spend answering relatively basic > >>questions, and by how elaborate their answers generally are. So I > >>cannot see much need for a new R mailing list. There are these > >>excellent mailing list archives, so why "fragment" this list? > > > >To follow up, well-thought through basic questions do get answered; in > >particular, they can be useful for those of us writing packages, > >documentation, etc. > > > >I have a sense that it is the quality of the question (details of what > >is intended to do, or not known, signs of using other sources of > >materials which folks have spent years on, no signs that this is a "do > >my work for me" question) rather than the level of the question, that > >is an issue. > > > >best, > >-tony > > ______________________________________________ > R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list > https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
Peter Flom
2003-Dec-17 13:16 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
After thinking this over, I think it's a good idea to have the beginner list (and I have subscribed). While I greatly appreciate this list, and the tremendous amount of help I've gotten from it, the style of this list is, usually, to give fairly short replies (e.g. "try ?function") This is fine. Different lists have different styles, and people here are, after all, donating their time and expertise. But I think that, on the beginner list, there should be a different style. I think answers should be lengthier, and more discursive. A beginner who gets a reply like "try searching help" is likely to be put off. As a relative newbie myself (and one who has to work in SAS as well as R) I still find myself having 'translation diffiuculties'. What do others think? Has anyone else subscribed to the beginner list yet? Peter Peter L. Flom, PhD Assistant Director, Statistics and Data Analysis Core Center for Drug Use and HIV Research National Development and Research Institutes 71 W. 23rd St www.peterflom.com New York, NY 10010 (212) 845-4485 (voice) (917) 438-0894 (fax)>>> Martin Wegmann <wegmann_mailinglist at gmx.net> 12/16/2003 6:49:15 PM >>>Hello, I agree completely that well thought out questions are important to receive good and quick replies and I agree as well that the replies on the R-help list are very good and helpful. But I had to learn and I am still learing how to write good questions and appreciate Spencer's explanantion how a good question should look like in his opinion. I am not sure how this new mailing list might evolve. It might be that the R-beginner list takes some load of the R-help list by reducing the amount of "basic" questions which won't be questioned anymore here (what aren't many) and that new user might be taught to post "good" question before they start posting to R-help. If it proves to be ineffective or might affect R-help in some unwanted manner it would be an easy one to shut it down. I doubt that it will split the R-help list - in my opinion it is unlikely that medium/experienced R user who will subscribe to R-beginner will unsubscribe from the R-help list. Moreover people starting with R are less likely to send any mails to this list, some do and are refered in most cases to the manuals. When I started R I looked through the archive and because I did not understand even one question, I was intimidated by this list and did not send any mail until a few weeks later (that was not because of the statistics but the commands) For this kind of people the R-beginner list is thought - to encourage them to send "stupid" questions during their first steps in R. They shall recognize questions they would have asked themselves. Therefore I think that the quality of the question is in this case less important than it's level. I hope I did not misunderstood some points ,-) best regards Martin On Tuesday 16 December 2003 17:20, Spencer Graves wrote:> I agree with Tony's observation that well thought outquestions> are more likely to receive an answer than something that is long, > rambling, and poorly focused. Many questions take more time to read > than I have available, so I don't bother. I like questions thatinclude> toy examples in a few lines of code that I can copy from an emailinto R> and test ideas. Careful formatting that looks pretty in an email isan> obstacle for me, because it increases the work required to get itinto> R. Many questioners could answer their own problems in the processof> generating such a toy example. When they can't, that exercise helps > them focus the question, which makes it easier for potentialrespondents> to understand the problem and reply. Without that, I must either > generate a toy example myself (which I've done many times) orrespond> with untested code and risk looking stupid when my untestedsuggestion> doesn't work. > > hope this helps. > spencer graves > > A.J. Rossini wrote: > >"Pascal A. Niklaus" <Pascal.Niklaus at unibas.ch> writes: > >>- In my experience even *very* basic questions *relating to the R > >>language* do get answered on r-help. I'm impressed by how muchtime> >>some members of the R core team spend answering relatively basic > >>questions, and by how elaborate their answers generally are. So I > >>cannot see much need for a new R mailing list. There are these > >>excellent mailing list archives, so why "fragment" this list? > > > >To follow up, well-thought through basic questions do get answered;in> >particular, they can be useful for those of us writing packages, > >documentation, etc. > > > >I have a sense that it is the quality of the question (details ofwhat> >is intended to do, or not known, signs of using other sources of > >materials which folks have spent years on, no signs that this is a"do> >my work for me" question) rather than the level of the question,that> >is an issue. > > > >best, > >-tony > > ______________________________________________ > R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list > https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help______________________________________________ R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
Rolf Turner
2003-Dec-17 14:01 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
Gabor Grothendieck wrote:> My personal view on this is that there is need for a friendly > list with a more "customer service" attitude than r-help.God save us from a ``"customer service" attitude'' --- bland, fatuous, feel-good useless twaddle! If you want a ``custome service'' attitude go and use Microsoft's crap! The subscribers to this list are not customers, they are participants in a collective endeavour. Those who come in with an ``I'm a customer; service me'' (;-)) attitude should look elsewhere. If they are such wimps that they collapse from being told a few brusque home truths, they shouldn't be doing statistical computing in the first place. When a Certain Guru rips strips off people (God knows he's done it to me often enough) on this list, there's a damned good reason for it. cheers, Rolf Turner rolf at math.unb.ca
A.J. Rossini
2003-Dec-17 14:41 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
"Peter Flom" <flom at ndri.org> writes:> What do others think? Has anyone else subscribed to the beginner list > yet?I won't. There is not enough time in the day. best, -tony -- rossini at u.washington.edu http://www.analytics.washington.edu/ Biomedical and Health Informatics University of Washington Biostatistics, SCHARP/HVTN Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center UW (Tu/Th/F): 206-616-7630 FAX=206-543-3461 | Voicemail is unreliable FHCRC (M/W): 206-667-7025 FAX=206-667-4812 | use Email CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This e-mail message and any attachme...{{dropped}}
Gabor Grothendieck
2003-Dec-17 16:53 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
I agree that - wikis (see the successful one for the lua programming language at: http://lua-users.org/wiki/ ) - forums are nice. Actually someone did set up an R wiki some time ago at: http://fawn.unibw-hamburg.de/cgi-bin/Rwiki.pl?RwikiHome yet no one really used it. Some critical mass of use is needed to get such a project off the ground. Other ways of communicating include: - a moderated list - a blog/summary such as this one for the Python language: http://www.pythonware.com/daily/index.htm or this one for the Ruby language: http://www.rubygarden.org/rurl/html/index.html Unfortunately these last two require a sustained effort on someone's part and I suspect no one would be willing to commit to this. --- Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2003 11:29:11 -0500 From: Frank E Harrell Jr <feh3k at spamcop.net> [ Add to Address Book | Block Address | Report as Spam ] To: rhelp <r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch> Subject: Re: [R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up My opinion is that separate lists are not needed (and I'm not clear on how the person with the original idea summarized opinions in a way that led to the conclusion that a new list is needed), but that a different medium may be needed. The problem with e-mail is that to many users, especially those who don't search the archives, e-mail is "memoryless", and that individual e-mail messages become cumulative rather than being corrected or updated. How many times have we seen almost identical questions posed only days apart? A well-organized discussion board (e.g. http://www.knoppix.net/forum) or wiki (e.g. using methods provided by twiki.org - see http://web.brandeis.edu/pages/view/ITS for a nice example; other users will know of better examples) is worth considering. It would be especially nice if before pressing the "Submit New Message" button a user had to check a few boxes acknowledging that she had consulted various sources of information, and besides the checkboxes would be links to those sources. Topics and subtopics would have to be created by an administrator but users could add sub sub topics and, optimally, edit other users' responses. This approach would IMHO get better participation by both novices and experts than would having two lists. --- Frank E Harrell Jr Professor and Chair School of Medicine Department of Biostatistics Vanderbilt University ______________________________________________ R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
Gabor Grothendieck
2003-Dec-17 17:19 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
In rereading this one idea occurred to me. What if the entire R help system were turned into a wiki? That is, ?whatever would take you to the help page, but not on your computer -- rather to the same page on the wiki. You would then find the docs as they exist now plus the experiences of other people with that command all at the same place. You could similarly add your own experience to the page. --- Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2003 11:53:59 -0500 (EST) From: Gabor Grothendieck <ggrothendieck at myway.com> To: <feh3k at spamcop.net>, <r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch> Subject: Re: [R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up I agree that - wikis (see the successful one for the lua programming language at: http://lua-users.org/wiki/ ) - forums are nice. Actually someone did set up an R wiki some time ago at: http://fawn.unibw-hamburg.de/cgi-bin/Rwiki.pl?RwikiHome yet no one really used it. Some critical mass of use is needed to get such a project off the ground. Other ways of communicating include: - a moderated list - a blog/summary such as this one for the Python language: http://www.pythonware.com/daily/index.htm or this one for the Ruby language: http://www.rubygarden.org/rurl/html/index.html Unfortunately these last two require a sustained effort on someone's part and I suspect no one would be willing to commit to this. --- Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2003 11:29:11 -0500 From: Frank E Harrell Jr <feh3k at spamcop.net> [ Add to Address Book | Block Address | Report as Spam ] To: rhelp <r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch> Subject: Re: [R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up My opinion is that separate lists are not needed (and I'm not clear on how the person with the original idea summarized opinions in a way that led to the conclusion that a new list is needed), but that a different medium may be needed. The problem with e-mail is that to many users, especially those who don't search the archives, e-mail is "memoryless", and that individual e-mail messages become cumulative rather than being corrected or updated. How many times have we seen almost identical questions posed only days apart? A well-organized discussion board (e.g. http://www.knoppix.net/forum) or wiki (e.g. using methods provided by twiki.org - see http://web.brandeis.edu/pages/view/ITS for a nice example; other users will know of better examples) is worth considering. It would be especially nice if before pressing the "Submit New Message" button a user had to check a few boxes acknowledging that she had consulted various sources of information, and besides the checkboxes would be links to those sources. Topics and subtopics would have to be created by an administrator but users could add sub sub topics and, optimally, edit other users' responses. This approach would IMHO get better participation by both novices and experts than would having two lists. --- Frank E Harrell Jr Professor and Chair School of Medicine Department of Biostatistics Vanderbilt University
Dear R-user, there have been already a lot of discussion with some good points against such a list and the opposite opinions as well. Well, I would like to propose that we start a testing phase either with - only "internal" membership, that means only people from this dept. + perhaps some other german universities can subscribe to list list and in 3 month time, there will an evaluation and summary how this list behaved. - or an open "international" membership, where the language is english and everybody can subsribe and no approval is required. In both cases the R-beginner mailing list can be shut down after this period of time if it proves to be inefficient, too much work or leads to a wrong understanding of R lists as a "customer service". I would reckon that for this testing phase it is not important to setup a searchable archive or put lots of work into it but to monitor which kind of questions are asked, into which direction it leads, if it encouraged people to ask "do it for me" questions and so on. I would do it and would appreciate if some native-english speaker could join. I hope that this proposal is acceptable for everybody. thanks a lot for the discussion, it changed my view of a beginner mailing list considerably, now I see the problems behind it. best regards, Martin On Tuesday 16 December 2003 14:17, Martin Wegmann wrote:> Dear R-user, > > I already received quite a lot of replies to this mail and like to do a > preliminary sum up. > > A few were sceptical about the use of such a beginner mailing list. > The arguments were that people starting with R will only stay subscribed > for a short time > until they reached the R-help "level" and therefore only beginner will > teach beginner how to > use R. > > But as far as I can judge, the majority of people who replied to this mail > are medium to > experienced user who like to help beginner but does not call themselves > highly > experienced user as the main "answerers" on the R-help mailing list. > > Therefore I assume that, even though some answers might be wrong, the > threat of > possibly wrong answers might be minimal, due to various experienced users > who like to > subsribe to this list. > > The majority of replies were positive about such a list and welcomed the > idea to > encourage new user by providing a basic R mailing list, like the already > existent > corresponding manuals in the contributed documentation at r-project.org. > > And again, this list shall only provide a basic and smooth introduction > into R and its > capabilities. > Questions like; "How do I make my labels in a graphic bigger? - How do I > change the > colour? - etc." are welcome and surely would annoy the majority of R-help > user because it > is mentioned somewhere on the first 10 pages of every manual, but people > who are used > to click on a graphic and change it in a second would not be convinced that > R can do > great graphics. > > well, I would welcome if there would be more discussion about it or to give > it a try > (perhaps mention it on the r-project web-site) and look how productive this > mailing list > proves to be. > The address of the R-beginner mailing list is: > > https://lists.uni-wuerzburg.de/mailman/listinfo/r-beginner > > best regards, Martin
Gabor Grothendieck
2003-Dec-17 23:09 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
A two level solution might be possible as part of this too. If you got ?whatever off your disk then it could contain a link to the corresponding wiki page. If you didn't have a connection you would still get what you get now but just couldn't follow the link. Whenever a new version of R came out the wiki would be replicated back to the help screens so that those with no internet still get some wiki info albeit as a snapshot as of the last release. Your idea of an option setting could work along with the above so that it could be set to go directly to the wiki if you had a connection and preferred that. --- Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2003 18:20:26 -0400 From: <kjetil at entelnet.bo> To: Gabor Grothendieck <ggrothendieck at myway.com>,Jonathan Baron <baron at psych.upenn.edu> Cc: <r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch>, <feh3k at spamcop.net> Subject: Re: [R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up On 17 Dec 2003 at 12:51, Jonathan Baron wrote:> On 12/17/03 12:19, Gabor Grothendieck wrote: > > > > > >In rereading this one idea occurred to me. What if the entire R help > >system were turned into a wiki? That is, > > > >?whatever > > > >would take you to the help page, but not on your computer -- > >rather to the same page on the wiki. You would then find the > >docs as they exist now plus the experiences of other peopleYes, this might be nice, but pls remember that many people in many countries still use machines without web connection, or worse, pay modem time by minute. Or use laptops on planes. But it could be nice to be able to write wiki("lm") as an alternative to help("lm") and maybe the possibility to use options("help") to associate ?lm with whichever one likes. Kjetil Halvorsen> >with that command all at the same place. You could similarly > >add your own experience to the page. > > Perhaps a good example is > http://www.php.net/manual/en/ > > But this is a lot of work to set up. I'd rather take small > steps. I do plan to look into phpbb as an alternative to > bazookaboard*, but not today, and probably not tomorrow. So if > things proceed without me, so be it. > > Jon > > *I remember rejecting phpbb once, but I sort of gave myself 30 > minutes to install something, not wanting to spend more time than > that. Bazookaboard met that test, and nothing else did. But I could > raise the cutoff. > > -- > Jonathan Baron, Professor of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania > Home page: http://www.sas.upenn.edu/~baron R page: > http://finzi.psych.upenn.edu/ > > ______________________________________________ > R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list > https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
Liaw, Andy
2003-Dec-18 00:26 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
> From: Tom Mulholland > > I have empathy for lots of the points already made, more > often on the life > is not always easy and you have to work at it flavour because > that's where > you make the real gains. > > One particular message early in the piece cited an example of > what a good > request might look like. Other lists sometime send out > regular messages > (although they tend to be about the rules of the list) that > are intended to > make sure that important pieces of information are regularly repeated. > > I know that there is more than enough talent on this list to > put together > suggestions for getting quick responses that could be sent > out regularly. > The sorts of things that might be in it would be when you > should attach > details of operating system, version etc. (or if they should always be > there) as well as comments like those by Spencer Graves and > it could include > the checklist that someone mentioned (I think that was Frank > Harrell). It > would almost be a pro-forma for messages and while people > don't have to use > it, it may help those who do think before they post (we'll > never stop some > people, because that's just the way they are) > > Tom Mulholland > Tom Mulholland AssociatesPlease see Eric Raymond's "How To Ask Questions The Smart Way" (http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html). (One of these days I shall take up Martin's suggestion and write an entry for R-FAQ pointing to it. The problem is getting people to actually read the FAQ, let alone links in the FAQ...) Best, Andy ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Notice: This e-mail message, together with any attachments,...{{dropped}}
Mulholland, Tom
2003-Dec-18 02:25 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
The fact that I've been using R for quite a while now and did not know about this document is supporting evidence of the need to get this sort of information out there. However that big list is going to daunt some people, it would have daunted me at the beginning. At a time when you are digesting a whole new universe (wonderful though it is) some short and pithy help is welcome. I expect that there would be a consensus on which topics are essential to improve the quality of questions. It is this select group of comments that could be put in a standard email sent out once a month. I would assume that the link to Eric Raymond's "How To Ask Questions The Smart Way"1 would be part of the advice. That is if you're going to spoon feed, then spoon feed the advice that helps the list most and encourage new list members to take the time to read the longer document. I think this special treatment is warranted because the issue is not about R per-se, it is about this list, so it makes more sense to have it coming out of this list rather than an entry in the R-FAQ. Although I can't see a reason for not doing both. Hmmm. Before I post this I had better go and see what Eric has to say about this sort of message. Ciao, Tom 1 An assumption on my part is that there is fundamental agreement that the document is the best source for advice on how to ask questions of this list _________________________________________________ Tom Mulholland Senior Policy Officer WA Country Health Service Tel: (08) 9222 4062 The contents of this e-mail transmission are confidential and may be protected by professional privilege. The contents are intended only for the named recipients of this e-mail. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any use, reproduction, disclosure or distribution of the information contained in this e-mail is prohibited. Please notify the sender immediately. -----Original Message----- From: Liaw, Andy [mailto:andy_liaw at merck.com] Sent: Thursday, 18 December 2003 8:26 AM To: 'Tom Mulholland' Cc: r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: RE: [R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up> From: Tom Mulholland > > I have empathy for lots of the points already made, more > often on the life > is not always easy and you have to work at it flavour because > that's where > you make the real gains. > > One particular message early in the piece cited an example of > what a good > request might look like. Other lists sometime send out > regular messages > (although they tend to be about the rules of the list) that > are intended to > make sure that important pieces of information are regularly repeated. > > I know that there is more than enough talent on this list to > put together > suggestions for getting quick responses that could be sent > out regularly. > The sorts of things that might be in it would be when you > should attach > details of operating system, version etc. (or if they should always be > there) as well as comments like those by Spencer Graves and > it could include > the checklist that someone mentioned (I think that was Frank > Harrell). It > would almost be a pro-forma for messages and while people > don't have to use > it, it may help those who do think before they post (we'll > never stop some > people, because that's just the way they are) > > Tom Mulholland > Tom Mulholland AssociatesPlease see Eric Raymond's "How To Ask Questions The Smart Way" (http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html). (One of these days I shall take up Martin's suggestion and write an entry for R-FAQ pointing to it. The problem is getting people to actually read the FAQ, let alone links in the FAQ...) Best, Andy ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------ Notice: This e-mail message, together with any attachments,...{{dropped}} ______________________________________________ R-help at stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
Thomas Lumley
2003-Dec-18 15:48 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
On Wed, 17 Dec 2003, Gabor Grothendieck wrote:> > > In rereading this one idea occurred to me. What if the entire R help > system were turned into a wiki? That is, > > ?whatever > > would take you to the help page, but not on your computer -- > rather to the same page on the wiki.This seems to assume that you are attached to the internet (or at least that R can reliably tell if you are). -thomas
Gabor Grothendieck
2003-Dec-18 16:16 UTC
[R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up
I had made a second subsequent suggestion to address this. See: https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-help/2003-December/042234.html --- Date: Thu, 18 Dec 2003 07:48:26 -0800 (PST) From: Thomas Lumley <tlumley at u.washington.edu> To: Gabor Grothendieck <ggrothendieck at myway.com> Cc: <feh3k at spamcop.net>, <r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch> Subject: Re: [R] mailing list for basic questions - preliminary sum up On Wed, 17 Dec 2003, Gabor Grothendieck wrote:> > > In rereading this one idea occurred to me. What if the entire R help > system were turned into a wiki? That is, > > ?whatever > > would take you to the help page, but not on your computer -- > rather to the same page on the wiki.This seems to assume that you are attached to the internet (or at least that R can reliably tell if you are). -thomas