Displaying 20 results from an estimated 2570 matches for "fortunately".
2010 Sep 01
5
[semi-OT] Using fortune() in an email signature
...default:
waitpid(pid, &exit_status, 0);
if (exit_status != EXIT_SUCCESS) {
fprintf(stderr, "Program %s doesn't seem to exist
\n",
producer);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
Unfortunately, I don't understand this at all. Can anyone give me a clue
as to what's happening?
Thanks.
--
Stuart Luppescu -=- slu .at. ccsr.uchicago.edu
University of Chicago -=- CCSR
???????? -=- Kernel 2.6.33-gentoo-r2
> library(fortunes) > fortune() Overall, SAS...
2014 Dec 21
2
How to get fortunes in R
I was going through
http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/papers/r_package_development_nov2014.pdf
and found this on pg-3
> fortunes::fortune(92)
##
## If you don't go with R now, you will someday.
## -- David Kane (on whether to use R or S-PLUS)
## R-SIG-Finance (November 2004)
However, when I tried it on my machine, I get
rajulocal at hogwarts:~/work/r_programming$ R -q
>
2010 Jan 06
1
fortunes: 250th fortune
Dear useRs,
it's a new year and time for a new CRAN-version of the "fortunes" package.
Version 1.3-7 is now online at
http://CRAN.R-project.org/package=fortunes
which contains the 250th fortune:
R> fortune(250)
As Obi-Wan Kenobi may have said in Star Wars: "Use the source, Luke!"
-- Barry Rowlingson (answering a question on the documentation of some
2010 Jan 06
1
fortunes: 250th fortune
Dear useRs,
it's a new year and time for a new CRAN-version of the "fortunes" package.
Version 1.3-7 is now online at
http://CRAN.R-project.org/package=fortunes
which contains the 250th fortune:
R> fortune(250)
As Obi-Wan Kenobi may have said in Star Wars: "Use the source, Luke!"
-- Barry Rowlingson (answering a question on the documentation of some
2017 Sep 30
4
Converting SAS Code
On 9/29/2017 3:37 PM, Rolf Turner wrote:
> On 30/09/17 07:45, JLucke at ria.buffalo.edu wrote:
>
> <SNIP>
>
>>
>> The conceptual paradigm for R is only marginally commensurate with
>> that of
>> standard statistical software.
>> You must immerse yourself in R to become proficient.
>
> Fortune nomination.
For newer list members wondering what
2014 Dec 21
0
How to get fortunes in R
Have you installed the fortunes package? From within R you can go
install.packages("fortunes")
If you have already installed it then there is something deeper going on.
On 21/12/2014 11:37, kamaraju kusumanchi wrote:
> I was going through
> http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/papers/r_package_development_nov2014.pdf
> and found this on pg-3
>
>
>> fortunes::fortune(92)
2004 Aug 12
0
"new" package fortunes 1.0-3
Dear useRs,
I used the summer months to work on all of my packages,
and so this is the first of a sequence of announcements
of "new" or updated packages. The "new" packages are new
in the sense that previous versions had been on CRAN for
some months but hadn't been announced to the R community
via this list until now.
All packages are available from the CRAN master site
2004 Aug 12
0
"new" package fortunes 1.0-3
Dear useRs,
I used the summer months to work on all of my packages,
and so this is the first of a sequence of announcements
of "new" or updated packages. The "new" packages are new
in the sense that previous versions had been on CRAN for
some months but hadn't been announced to the R community
via this list until now.
All packages are available from the CRAN master site
2005 Jul 24
1
cvs commit: src/games/fortune/fortune fortune.c
On Sun, Jul 24, 2005 at 04:06:02PM +0200, Poul-Henning Kamp wrote:
+> In message <20050724135738.GM46538@darkness.comp.waw.pl>, Pawel Jakub Dawidek writes:
+>
+> >We should probably test entropy quality on boot.
+> >I've somewhere userland version of /sys/dev/rndtest/ which implements
+> >FIPS140-2 tests for (P)RNGs. We can use put it into rc.d/ and warn users.
2011 May 12
3
Reproducible use case for R crash after updating R
This might have been discussed before, but below is a
"not-so-unlikely" use case where the user follows normal procedures,
updates R to a major release version, and then R crashes:
1. Use runs R stable (e.g. v2.13.0).
2. User installs a package with a namespace, e.g. install.packages("fortunes").
3. User uses the package and one of the package's objects are assigned
to the
2005 May 18
1
problem to exclude
Hi,
I want to mirror NetBSD on this server:
ftp://ftp.univ-orleans.fr/logiciel-libre/netbsd-ftp/
The problem is I dont want to mirror old versions (1.5.x)
There are 1.5* branches as subdirs of 'packages' and others at the root
of the server called 'NetBSD-release-1-5' and 'NetBSD-1.5.3'.
I want to avoid to sync them.
The command I use to sync is:
- - - - - - - - - - -
2006 Sep 13
1
Error: package/namespace load failed for 'fortunes'
Hello!
I have the following R code in my .Rprofile file - just for fun.
library(fortunes)
fortune()
detach("package:fortunes")
This works nicely in R 2.3.1, but it throws the following error under
latest R-devel:
...
...
Type 'demo()' for some demos, 'help()' for on-line help, or
'help.start()' for an HTML browser interface to help.
Type 'q()' to
2007 Mar 04
1
fortune() in .Rprofile conflicts with R CMD INSTALL
Hello,
This is about fortune package, but I think that might be related also to
base R, so I am sending to package maintainer and R-devel list.
I have the following in my .Rprofile to break monotony of code writing
library(utils)
library(fortunes)
fortune()
detach("package:fortunes")
so I get a fortune every time I start R. It seems that this conflicts
with R CMD INSTALL in latest
2005 Feb 02
0
fortune update: 100th fortune
Dear useRs,
version 1.1-0 of the fortunes package is available from CRAN. It now
contains 100 R fortunes. Thanks to all who contributed.
Best wishes,
Z
_______________________________________________
R-packages mailing list
R-packages at stat.math.ethz.ch
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-packages
2005 Feb 02
0
fortune update: 100th fortune
Dear useRs,
version 1.1-0 of the fortunes package is available from CRAN. It now
contains 100 R fortunes. Thanks to all who contributed.
Best wishes,
Z
_______________________________________________
R-packages mailing list
R-packages at stat.math.ethz.ch
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-packages
2008 Jun 03
2
surprising predicting capabilities
Hi,
I noticed the following fortune in R 2.7 and 2.6.2:
fortune('Spreads')
If anything, there should be a Law: Thou Shalt Not Even Think Of Producing A
Graph That Looks Like Anything From A Spreadsheet.
-- Ted Harding (in a discussion about producing graphics)
R-help (August 2008)
Just wondering, what function and library gave this detailed prediction?
Cheers
2017 Sep 30
0
Converting SAS Code
And appropriatesly
> library(fortunes) > fortune()
SAS seems to be to statistical computing what Microsoft is to personal
computing.
?? -- Bill Venables
????? 'Exegeses on Linear Models' paper (May 2000)
On Saturday, September 30, 2017, 4:57:23 PM EDT, Rolf Turner <r.turner at auckland.ac.nz> wrote:
On 01/10/17 01:22, Robert Baer wrote:
>
>
> On 9/29/2017
2010 Feb 05
2
(Another) Bates fortune?
I vote to 'fortunize' Doug Bates on
Hierarchical data sets: which software to use?
"The widespread use of spreadsheets or SPSS data sets or SAS data sets
which encourage the "single table with a gargantuan number of columns,
most of which are missing data in most cases" approach to organization
of longitudinal data is regrettable."
2011 Dec 16
1
Fortune? -- was Re: optim with simulated annealing SANN ...
Folks:
I thought John Nash's comment below was profound and a possible
Fortunes candidate:
(Aside: I believe it applies to a great deal of what is discussed on
this list, not just stochastic optimization.)
Cheers,
Bert
... (in the context of stochastic optimization)
>... As with many tools in this domain, for effective use they
> require more knowledge than many of their users
2011 Nov 22
4
evaluation question
Dear R People:
Hope you're having a nice day.
Here is a character vector:
> yz
[1] "pexp(3.2,rate=1)"
> str(yz)
chr "pexp(3.2,rate=1)"
>
And I would like to evaluate that vector.
I tried:
> eval(as.expression(yz))
[1] "pexp(3.2,rate=1)"
>
But that doesn't work.
Any suggestions would be most welcome. I have a feeling that it's
quite