Displaying 6 results from an estimated 6 matches for "istic".
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i2tic
2001 Jan 19
1
Detecting silence
Completely new topic, and perhaps more important than it might appear
just at a casual glance, if one hasn't been thinking about -- and
really wanting to write -- some possible future (istic?)
applications (as i have . . . and do).
What i would like to have, which would _very_ much simplify what's
involved in writing the code for certain things i have in mind, is
(let me just say this and clarify it afterward) a callback mechanism
(perhaps) that notifies me whenever a period of (r...
2005 Sep 12
3
Won''t boot to Xen, GRUB Problem
I am installing Xen on a remote server. I left the other kernels on the
grub.conf and made xen the default to boot from. The box didn''t boot into
Xen on reboot but I''m not sure why. Here is my Xen config file:
# grub.conf generated by anaconda
#
# Note that you do not have to rerun grub after making changes to this file
# NOTICE: You have a /boot partition. This means that
#
2005 Jul 28
2
kernel panic - Init problems
I have the following message while trying to boot
xenlinux:
-----------------------------------------------------
>Kernel Panic : Syncing no init found try passing
init= option to kernel
------------------------------------------------------
My grub.conf is
-------------------------------------------------------
title Xen 2.0 / XenLinux 2.6- 1th test
root (hd0,1)
kernel
2004 Feb 06
2
Normality Test on several groups
Hi,
I use ks.test or lillie.test to verify a normal distribution. It's performed
for a group
My users use SigmaStat software and a One Way ANOVA on several groups
In the result page there is a probability value to determine if Normality
test is failed or passed
So, how can i retrieve this probability value on several groups?
Is there another function in R to verify normality on several
2010 Nov 28
0
[LLVMdev] RFC: Exception Handling Proposal II
On Nov 28, 2010, at 6:23 AM, Renato Golin wrote:
> There still seems to be a confusion between clean-ups and catch areas.
> What you both describe are catch areas, on which your arguments
> (AFAICS) are perfectly valid. The distinction is between catch and
> clean-up areas.
>
> You would never print the value of %x in a clean-up area. The sole
> purpose of clean-up areas is
2010 Nov 28
3
[LLVMdev] RFC: Exception Handling Proposal II
On 28 November 2010 10:20, Bill Wendling <wendling at apple.com> wrote:
> Or am I missing something? :-)
Hi Bill, John,
There still seems to be a confusion between clean-ups and catch areas.
What you both describe are catch areas, on which your arguments
(AFAICS) are perfectly valid. The distinction is between catch and
clean-up areas.
You would never print the value of %x in a