Displaying 10 results from an estimated 10 matches for "inessentials".
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inessential
2009 Apr 07
1
axis values on lattice log-scale plot
I'm plotting the following (stripped of inessentials)
xyplot(sd ~ distance | wshed,data=sdvar.df,scales=list(x=list
(log=TRUE),y=list(log=TRUE)))
sdvar.df is a data frame, sd and distance are numeric, wshed is an
ordered factor
trying to replicate the action of log="xy" in plot()
The plot works fine but the axis values at the ticks...
2008 Nov 17
4
functional (?) programming in r
the following is a trivialized version of some functional code i tried
to use in r:
(funcs = lapply(1:5, function(i) function() i))
# a list of no-parameter functions, each with its own closure environment,
# each supposed to return the corresponding index when applied to no
arguments
sapply(funcs, function(func) func())
# supposed to return c(1,2,3,4,5)
there is absolutely nothing unusual in
2009 Nov 18
2
Unnecesary code?
Dear R-ers,
While browsing the R sources, I found the following piece of code
in src\main\memory.c:
static void reset_pp_stack(void *data)
{
R_size_t *poldpps = data;
R_PPStackSize = *poldpps;
}
To me, it looks like the poldpps pointer is a nuissance; can't you
just cast the data pointer and derefer it at once? Say,
static void reset_pp_stack(void *data)
{
R_PPStackSize = *
2012 Apr 09
0
rockchalk_1.5.4 posted
Greetings:
rockchalk is a collection of functions to facilitate presentation of regression models.
It includes some functions that I have been circulating for quite some time (such as
"outreg") as well as several others. The main aim is to allow people who do not
understand very much R to survive a course in intermediate regression analysis.
The examples included with the functions
2012 Apr 09
0
rockchalk_1.5.4 posted
Greetings:
rockchalk is a collection of functions to facilitate presentation of regression models.
It includes some functions that I have been circulating for quite some time (such as
"outreg") as well as several others. The main aim is to allow people who do not
understand very much R to survive a course in intermediate regression analysis.
The examples included with the functions
2008 Sep 29
1
Ambisonics Proposal summary.
Hi all,
My apologies for the confusion ... but I am re-naming this thread
again because the proposal doesn't come from Ambisonia. As the founder
of Ambisonia I have only been 'mediating' between some members of the
ambisonic community ... so it would be wrong to associate the spec
with Ambisonia.
To clarify. This is what the spec proposes:
- that Mapping = 1 means the contents are
2017 Apr 20
0
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
On Apr 20, 2017, at 7:33 AM, James B. Byrne <byrnejb at harte-lyne.ca> wrote:
>
> When a vendor ... fundamentally changes the way the administration
> of an operating system is presented
I?ve gotten the sense from this other part of the thread that the answer to my question, ?What are you moving to?? is FreeBSD.
If you think FreeBSD system administration hasn?t changed over the
2003 May 20
4
error with cupsaddsmb - adddriver
Hello,
I have installed cups on a linux server (running with RH 9.0).
When executing "cupsaddsmb -a -v", I get an error: NT_STATUS_UNSUCCESSFULL,
when attemping to execute adddriver".
Can someone help on the meaning of this error, and on its reason (cause) ?
Please find hereafter a file with result (and the error) of this commmand
"cupsaddsmb", for a printer:
2004 Jun 15
1
R: slope estimations of teeth like data
On 15 Jun 2004 at 13:52, Vito Muggeo wrote:
> Dear Petr,
> Probably I don't understand exactly what you are looking for.
>
> However your "plot(x,c(y,z))" suggests a broken-line model for the
> response "c(y,x)" versus the variables x. Therefore you could estimate
> a segmented model to obtain (different) slope (and breakpoint)
> estimates. See
2017 Apr 20
4
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
On Wed, April 19, 2017 16:22, Chris Murphy wrote:
>
> Apple has had massively disruptive changes on OS X and iOS. Windows
> has had a fairly disruptive set of changes in Windows 10. About the
> only things that don't change are industrial OS's.
>
I have no idea how this reference applies to my earlier post. We do
not use Apple or Windows servers and the desktop