Displaying 20 results from an estimated 72 matches for "conduc".
Did you mean:
conduct
2006 Nov 21
4
means over factors in mlm terms
...rms){
label <- attr(terms[term], "term.labels")
cat(label,":\n")
means <- aggregate(data, list(label), FUN=mean)
print(means)
}
}
Here is a sample context-- a randomized block design
with two crossed factors (Contour, Depth) and 9 responses (pH, N, ...
Conduc). [An R-readable version of the data is appended at the bottom.]
> soils <- read.delim("soils.dat")
> str(soils)
'data.frame': 48 obs. of 14 variables:
$ Group : int 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 ...
$ Contour: Factor w/ 3 levels "Depression","Slope&qu...
2007 Feb 28
0
Bug#330220: Permissions of /var/lock/logcheck not conducive to logcheck user writing to it
Package: logcheck
Version: 1.2.54
Followup-For: Bug #330220
root at ns2:/# ls -l /var/lock/
total 4
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 2007-01-30 15:40 logcheck
I think chmod 775 on that file would fix this problem...
-- System Information:
Debian Release: 4.0
APT prefers testing
APT policy: (500, 'testing'), (500, 'stable')
Architecture: amd64 (x86_64)
Shell: /bin/sh linked
2010 Oct 28
2
[LLVMdev] [LLVMDev] Register Allocation
...few changes regarding register allocation. I am
wondering will there be support for radically different data
structures other than the LiveIntervals, Virtual Register Map, etc? I
have build a custom data structure which has it's own intermediate
representation like live-intervals, but much more conducive for my
allocation algorithm. I do not know if LiveIntervals can accurately
describe my data structure, and it would be a huge hack to enforce the
live interval framework.
- Thanks,
Jeff Kunkel
2007 Aug 28
0
help with aggregate(): tables of means for terms in an mlm
...ralize it. I want to return a result that has the factor-level
combinations as rownames, and the means as the body of the table
(aggregate returns the factors as initial columns).
# Examples: m1 & m2 are desired results
> library(car)
> soils.mod <- lm(cbind(pH,N,Dens,P,Ca,Mg,K,Na,Conduc) ~ Block +
Contour*Depth, data=Soils)
> term.names(soils.mod)
[1] "(Intercept)" "Block" "Contour" "Depth"
[5] "Contour:Depth"
>
> # response variables
> resp<- model.response(model.frame(soils.mod))
> # 1-fac...
2009 Jun 24
2
[LLVMdev] Garbage collection implementation
.../docs/hlvm/ to get an index
of the
documentation that is available.
but unfortunately that URL yields a 404.
While I could check the docs out of subversion myself (assuming they're
actually there, which I haven't verified), putting the docs online for
easy access would be much more conducive to attracting users and or
developers to HLVM.
Eric
2005 Jan 16
3
[LLVMdev] LLVM & Incremental Compilation
...age project of mine, LLVM
looks promising, but I'd like to clear a few things up first:
1. What relation does LLVM bear with GCC; why would somebody use LLVM
for a compiler back-end over GCC (aside from the Virtual Machine)? How
do the goals of GCC and LLVM differ as compiler toolkits?
2. How conducive to Incremental Compilation is LLVM? I would like to be
able to compile and execute code in the same process immediately. An
example of this would be in an interactive programming environment, or a
Common Lisp style of compilation.
3. Is LLVM able to support advanced runtime features as continua...
2010 Oct 28
0
[LLVMdev] [LLVMDev] Register Allocation
...support for deferred insertion of spill code might go away in the future. It is not really needed any longer - InlineSpiller simply inserts spill code directly.
> I
> have build a custom data structure which has it's own intermediate
> representation like live-intervals, but much more conducive for my
> allocation algorithm. I do not know if LiveIntervals can accurately
> describe my data structure, and it would be a huge hack to enforce the
> live interval framework.
So don't. RegAllocFast isn't using LiveIntervals either. It is entirely optional.
/jakob
2006 Mar 12
1
meta / lme
Hi
I'm conducing a meta-analysis using the meta package.
Here's a bit of code that works fine -
tmp <- metacont(samplesize.2, pctdropout.2, sddropout.2,
samplesize.1, pctdropout.1, sddropout.1,
data=Dataset, sm="WMD")
I would now like to control for a couple of variables (c...
2000 Oct 29
2
Question Re: Bitrate Peeling
Monty,
You helped me out quite a bit the other day, but I just wanted to make sure
I understand something. The "ideal" way to do bit rate peeling is to have
the encoder set the file up to be conducive to the peeling process, and the
streamer would be the device that actually does the peeling. Am I correct
in assuming, then, that the decoder would think that the file it is
receiving was (more or less) simply encoded at the lower bit rate, or does
the decoder also have to know that it'...
2005 Sep 09
1
bochs or qemu & gdb
HPA,
now that syslinux release madness has calmed down,
could you provide some info on how we syslinux-minions/wannabes
can use bochs and/or qemu to run (sys|pxe|iso|ext)linux
in an emulated environment thats more conducive to
debugging, single-stepping, and ultimately understanding
how the magic happens ?
tia
jimc
2013 Jun 14
1
[5.10] PXE + dhcp opts 209, 210 and path issues in tftp/http
...ch does _not_ split its argument.
Hmm... actually a new directive that allows a more complex path entry
syntax might be a better idea - something along the lines of,
URLPATH http://www.foo.com/bar/ ftp://baz.org/ ::/tftp/ /bin/
That way, we can completely redefine the syntax as something more
conducive to urls.
--
Matt Fleming, Intel Open Source Technology Center
2010 Feb 10
1
heplot3d / rgl : example causes R GUI to crash
...e my R
session crashes. I've never seen this
behavior before.
The problem occurs *whenever* I try to supply linear hypotheses to be
displayed along with the model
terms. Here is a small example:
library(heplots)
# Soils data, from car package
soils.mod <- lm(cbind(pH,N,Dens,P,Ca,Mg,K,Na,Conduc) ~ Block +
Contour*Depth, data=Soils)
Anova(soils.mod)
heplot(soils.mod, variables=c("Ca", "Mg"))
## this works OK
heplot3d(soils.mod, variables=c("Mg", "Ca", "Na"))
## this crashes R, but it draws most of the plot first
heplot3d(soils.mod, varia...
2020 Jun 26
4
IRC spam
...deal with.
On that note, they aren't completely impossible to work with in some cases,
it just might require accepting getting attacked for a few weeks.
I'm a channel operator in one of the Mesa related IRC channels and have had
success in communicating with them that their behaviour is not conducive to
the environment that we were attempting to create in the channel.
This took a bit of coaxing on their "good" days, and communicating with
them while being attacked for around a month on end. At the end of this
month-long attack and communication I was able to get them to understand...
2005 Jan 16
0
[LLVMdev] LLVM & Incremental Compilation
...has advantages over LLVM (more target support
etc), and LLVM has advantages over GCC (JIT compilation, easier to work
with, interprocedural optimization, can use it to build non GPL tools,
...). This is really a big question that has many nuances, but that is at
least part of it.
> 2. How conducive to Incremental Compilation is LLVM? I would like to be
> able to compile and execute code in the same process immediately. An
> example of this would be in an interactive programming environment, or a
> Common Lisp style of compilation.
That is no problem. You can take a look at the l...
2020 May 03
2
Fwd: Re: Fwd: Re: Instalar paquetes no disponibles para la versión actual
Hola a todos:
Las versiones oficiales de R no son versiones beta, sino versiones
"definitivas" convenientemente testadas. Los paquetes disponibles en el
servidor de CRAN están testados contra la versión actual de R.
Mantenerse en una versión anticuada normalmente conduce a la pérdida de
funcionalidad, errores de dependencias entre versiones de paquetes
nuevos etc. En R, actualizar a la última versión suele ser una
recomendación bastante conservadora.
Un saludo
Marcelino
El 03/05/2020 a las 7:25, Rafael Bidegain escribió:
> hola a todos.
> contesto entr...
2000 Jul 17
3
Fonts and Line widths
Hi All R guru's,
A couple of simple questions which I cannot find answers to in "an
introduction to R" or in the reference manuals.
I am running R on Win95, and have plotted up quite a nice box and
whisker plot:
char<-read.table("n:/reddinm/grifpr~1/survey/char.txt")
attach(char)
boxplot(Al,Fe,OC,pH, range=0,xaxis=FALSE,
ylab="Proportion of Unirigated
2006 Mar 28
3
dial plan logic
...s.....
during that time it can ring multiple extensions, at the same time, then
after that hunt through various ext until the appropriate party is
reached, or if not then it will fall to voicemail.
I understand a queue in its most basic function will do this, but a
queue doesn't seem to be conducive to dialplan logic, it is setup more
for a call center situation. Ideally I would like to put in prompts
which will ask them if they would like to continue to hold if need be
(ie everyone is on the phone) or go to a voicemail, or if no one is
answering then it will go to voicemail etc. Also...
2011 Nov 10
0
[LLVMdev] [llvm-commits] [PATCH] BasicBlock Autovectorization Pass
...ke the
>> loop unroller create code in a way such that the constrained vectorizer
>> still performs the relevant transformations.
>
> I was not clear; I meant that imposing a cut off is likely to work, but
> it would work even better if the loop unroller produced code
> more-conducive to vectorization.
Is such a cutoff already integrated and can be enabled by default. I
believe it would be great if we could show that the compile time
increase is limited by a low constant (maybe 100%), while still showing
an overall improvement in run time.
>> Also, what do you mean...
2011 Nov 08
3
[LLVMdev] [llvm-commits] [PATCH] BasicBlock Autovectorization Pass
...e other hand, we could make the
> loop unroller create code in a way such that the constrained vectorizer
> still performs the relevant transformations.
I was not clear; I meant that imposing a cut off is likely to work, but
it would work even better if the loop unroller produced code
more-conducive to vectorization.
>
> Also, what do you mean with 'if the loop unroller would intermix
> statements from the loops where possible'. Are you referring to the
> grouped unrolling as shown in my the last mail?
Yes.
Also, the code necessary to take advantage of grouped unroll...
2016 Jul 22
3
[RFC] One or many git repositories?
...ut I think the high order bit is the
> repository question.
>
So, a reasonable question might be, why do I prefer #2?
I have a lot of not terribly connected reasons.
First, I want to consider what happens if we go with #1. Today, LLVM
subprojects have been formed essentially any time it was conducive to do
so. This worked around the subversion sparse checkout challenges (arguably
also solved by newer subversion features, but that's neither here nor
there) and didn't cause any problem because we could lay out the tree any
way that made sense and we always had a global revision number....