Displaying 20 results from an estimated 200 matches for "constituencies".
2008 Sep 15
4
getting data into correct format for summarizing ... reshape, aggregate, or...
I would like to reformat this data frame into something that I can
produce some descriptive statistics. I have been playing around with
the reshape package and maybe this is not the best way to proceed. I
would like to use RiverMile and constituent as the grouping variables
to get the summary statistics:
198a 198b
mean mean
sd sd
... ...
etc. for all of these.
I have tried
2008 Dec 31
4
[LLVMdev] "grep -w" irregularity
On Tue, Dec 30, 2008 at 8:59 PM, Scott Michel <scottm at aero.org> wrote:
> On Dec 30, 2008, at 5:47 PM, Chris Lattner wrote:
>>
>> On Dec 30, 2008, at 5:24 PM, Scott Michel wrote:
>>
>>> Chris:
>>>
>>> On my _local_ x86_64 Ubuntu 7.10 machine, the shift_ops.ll is an
>>> unexpected success (i.e., "grep -w shlh %t1.s | count
2008 Dec 31
0
[LLVMdev] "grep -w" irregularity
I've attached the .s file it produces in case you want to file a bug
against grep.
On Tue, Dec 30, 2008 at 10:36 PM, Daniel Berlin <dberlin at dberlin.org> wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 30, 2008 at 8:59 PM, Scott Michel <scottm at aero.org> wrote:
>> On Dec 30, 2008, at 5:47 PM, Chris Lattner wrote:
>>>
>>> On Dec 30, 2008, at 5:24 PM, Scott Michel wrote:
2013 Feb 12
2
[LLVMdev] Argument Lowering
Tim Northover <t.p.northover at gmail.com> writes:
>> Can anyone explain why LLVM can't do it? I've read vague hints of, "not
>> all the information is there," but I'd really like to understand this
>> better.
>
> The most compelling example I've heard is the x86_64 ABI. It refers to
> POD types, unions and structs with non-aligned
2003 Oct 28
2
formula parsing, using parts ...
I am writing a little abstraction for a series of tests. For example,
I am running an anova and kruskal.test on a one-factor model. That
isn't a particular problem, I have an interface like:
my.function <- function(model,data) {
print(deparse(substitute(data)))
a <- anova(lm(formula,data))
print(a)
if(a$"Pr(>F)"[1] < 0.05) {
pairwise.t.test(???)
}
2003 May 18
1
How to split a dataframe into smaller constituent dataframes
I have read a large dataset into a dataframe using RODBC, the rows of data
in the dataframe are (integer) timestamped and I would like to divide the
original dataframe into n smaller dataframes where dataframe 1 contains all
rows that had timestamps falling in the period 0-x1 minutes, dataframe 2
contains all rows that had timestamps falling between x1+1 and x2, etc..
Does anyone know how to
2010 Oct 18
1
Basic structure operations doubt
I'm doing these manipulations on the data frame and wondering why does R
have to remember historical data on my operation and not just keep the
needed info.
Probably a basic fundamentals of the way R handles data .. Pls point me to
the manual if possible ..
I have this Index data:
> head(NIFTY_INDX)
Constituents.list.of.S.P.CNX.Nifty X X.1
X.2 X.3
2013 Feb 12
0
[LLVMdev] Argument Lowering
>> At a purely implementation level, the first problem at the moment is
>> that IR-level types are discarded by the time call lowering happens.
>> Structures are split up into their constituent fields and those are
>> all a backend has available for its decisions.
>
> When you say, "Structures are split up into their constituent fields,"
> what do you
2006 Aug 31
0
Data Download Probelm from Yahoo
Hi All,
I'm trying to download data using following code.
require(UsingR) ## This is the R-package you need
to run command yahoo.get.hist.quote
#Initialize empty table
closing <-NULL
#Downalod consituents since I don't have it on my comp
download.file("http://www2.standardandpoors.com/spf/csv/index/sp500.csv",
"Z:/BETA PROJECT/DATA DOWNLOAD FROM
2008 May 06
4
General Plotting Question
f <- (structure(list(X = structure(96:97, .Label = c("119DAmm", "119DN",
"119DNN", "119DO", "119DOC", "119Flow", "119Nit", "119ON", "119OPhos",
"119OrgP", "119Phos", "119TKN", "119TOC", "148DAmm", "148DN",
"148DNN", "148DO",
2008 Dec 31
0
[LLVMdev] "grep -w" irregularity
On Dec 30, 2008, at 5:47 PM, Chris Lattner wrote:
>
> On Dec 30, 2008, at 5:24 PM, Scott Michel wrote:
>
>> Chris:
>>
>> On my _local_ x86_64 Ubuntu 7.10 machine, the shift_ops.ll is an
>> unexpected success (i.e., "grep -w shlh %t1.s | count 9" succeeds.)
>>
>> I get the same unexpected success on my x86_64 Mac 10.4.11.
>>
>> On
2008 Dec 31
3
[LLVMdev] "grep -w" irregularity
On Dec 30, 2008, at 5:24 PM, Scott Michel wrote:
> Chris:
>
> On my _local_ x86_64 Ubuntu 7.10 machine, the shift_ops.ll is an
> unexpected success (i.e., "grep -w shlh %t1.s | count 9" succeeds.)
>
> I get the same unexpected success on my x86_64 Mac 10.4.11.
>
> On the x86_64 buildbot, the same test fails. The culprit is grep,
> evidently. It's just
2010 Mar 26
2
how to make stacked plot?
Dear friends:
I'm interested to make a stacked plot of cumulative incidence. that's, the cuminc model is fitted [fit=cuminc(time, relapse)] and cumulative incidence is in place. I'd like to stack the cuminc plots (relapse of luekemia and death free from leukemia, for example) , then the constituent ratio of leukemia relapse and treatment related mortality is very clear. Can
2011 Apr 12
2
The three routines in R that calculate the wilcoxon signed-rank test give different p-values.......which is correct?
I have a question concerning the Wilcoxon signed-rank test, and
specifically, which R subroutine I should use for my particular dataset.
There are three different commands in R (that I'm aware of) that calculate
the Wilcoxon signed-rank test; wilcox.test, wilcox.exact, and
wilcoxsign_test. When I run the three commands on the same dataset, I get
different p-values. I'm hoping that
2008 Jan 11
3
how to make read-only data frames?
QUESTION: is there a way to make objects (e.g. data frames) read-only?
BACKGROUND: I am writing some functions that use a data frame (frequencies
of tidal constituents) that I want to be read-only. I can see how to
accomplish this within a single function (just define the data in the
function), but I'm not sure how to share read-only values between
(un-nested) functions. Is there a more
2008 May 03
2
Stacked bar plot anomaly When column contains a negative and a positive value
Hello users,
I've noticed a problem when creating a stacked column plot when a column
contains a negative and a positive value. e.g.
series1<-c(-1,-2, 3, 4, 5)
series2<-c( 5, -4,-3,-2, 1)
data<-rbind(series1,series2)
barplot(as.matrix(data), beside=FALSE)
In these cases (i.e. first, third and fifth columns) the plotting is not
handled correctly. Compare this output with that
2015 Jan 05
2
[LLVMdev] [PATCH] Fix Emacs package formatting
Hi
I'd like users to be able to install the LLVM major modes from
MELPA[1], the most popular Emacs package repository. However, these
files are not well-formed packages.
I've made the following changes:
* Both files have valid package headers and footers (you can verify
with M-x checkdoc).
* Fixed style warnings generated by checkdoc.
* Fixed a byte-compiler warning in llvm-mode.el.
*
2005 Feb 22
3
[LLVMdev] Area for improvement
>
> Now the problem is obvious. A two dimensional array access is being
> performed by a single instruction. The arithmetic needed to address
> the element is implicit, and therefore inaccessible to optimizations.
> The redundant calculations can not be eliminated, nor can strength
> reduction be performed. getelementptr needs to be broken down into
> its constituent
2013 Feb 12
0
[LLVMdev] Argument Lowering
Hi Hal,
> Can anyone explain why LLVM can't do it? I've read vague hints of, "not
> all the information is there," but I'd really like to understand this
> better.
The most compelling example I've heard is the x86_64 ABI. It refers to
POD types, unions and structs with non-aligned fields.
I think POD is a red herring because Clang would have to deal with
that
2013 Feb 12
4
[LLVMdev] Argument Lowering
We all know that LLVM codegen doesn't handle struct arguments...er...at
all. Frontend code has to do a bunch of ABI lowering to make it work.
Can anyone explain why LLVM can't do it? I've read vague hints of, "not
all the information is there," but I'd really like to understand this
better. Is there something we can do to make proper argument handling
possible within