Displaying 10 results from an estimated 10 matches for "uninspiring".
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2009 Nov 12
1
Step Function Freezing R
I have a question that might not be "kosher" here, but I'm running out
of options and need some help. Basically using the function "step" is
freezing R. I am running a model that includes a number of
interactions on a large data set with a number of dummy variables
representing whether an event occurred or not. Here's a simplified
example -
fit =
2013 Aug 12
2
Passenger-Rack error 500: no such file to load -- rack
...er+rack. It has been running
properly for almost a year and decided to stop working on the weekend. Now
I''m getting the Purple "Ruby (Rack) application could not be started"
screen with
Error: no such file to load -- rack
Application: /data1/rack/puppetmaster
The backtrace is uninspiring. Snippets include:
/usr/lib/ruby/site_ruby/1.8/rubygems/core_ext/kernel_require.rb in
`gem_original_require''
/usr/share/rubygems/gems/passenger-3.0.17/lib/phusion_passenger/rack/application_spawner.rb in
`load_rack_app''
I can only guess that a file went missing or got corrupte...
2020 Aug 05
3
CentOS Security Advisories OVAL feed??
On 05/08/2020 16:49, Johnny Hughes wrote:
> On 8/5/20 1:05 AM, centos at niob.at wrote:
>> On 04/08/2020 23:50, Jon Pruente wrote:
>>> On Tue, Aug 4, 2020 at 11:34 AM <centos at niob.at> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Q5) If the answer to the last question is "no": shouldn't there be such
>>>> a resource?
>>>>
>>> CentOS
2009 Feb 18
0
[LLVMdev] Parametric polymorphism
On Wednesday 18 February 2009 21:27:21 DeLesley Hutchins wrote:
> Try implementing a generic complex number class in Java, and watch the
> two-order-of-magnitude drop in performance on scientific code.
Amen. I haven't proven it with a working HLVM yet but I believe LLVM will make
it possible (even easy?) to generate extremely performant code from heavily
abstracted high-level source.
2020 Aug 05
0
CentOS Security Advisories OVAL feed??
On 8/5/20 10:45 AM, centos at niob.at wrote:
> On 05/08/2020 16:49, Johnny Hughes wrote:
>> On 8/5/20 1:05 AM, centos at niob.at wrote:
>>> On 04/08/2020 23:50, Jon Pruente wrote:
>>>> On Tue, Aug 4, 2020 at 11:34 AM <centos at niob.at> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Q5) If the answer to the last question is "no": shouldn't there be
2001 Apr 28
9
two new packages
I've prepared preliminary versions of two packages that I plan eventually
to contribute to CRAN:
car (for "Companion to Applied Regression") is a package that provides a
variety of functions in support of linear and generalized linear models,
including regression diagnostics (e.g., studentized residuals, hat-values,
Cook's distances, dfbeta, dfbetas, added-variable plots,
2001 Apr 28
9
two new packages
I've prepared preliminary versions of two packages that I plan eventually
to contribute to CRAN:
car (for "Companion to Applied Regression") is a package that provides a
variety of functions in support of linear and generalized linear models,
including regression diagnostics (e.g., studentized residuals, hat-values,
Cook's distances, dfbeta, dfbetas, added-variable plots,
2001 Apr 28
9
two new packages
I've prepared preliminary versions of two packages that I plan eventually
to contribute to CRAN:
car (for "Companion to Applied Regression") is a package that provides a
variety of functions in support of linear and generalized linear models,
including regression diagnostics (e.g., studentized residuals, hat-values,
Cook's distances, dfbeta, dfbetas, added-variable plots,
2009 Feb 18
2
[LLVMdev] Parametric polymorphism
> I was thinking of the "T extends Comparable" part, which does involve
> subtype polymorphism. Apologies if I'm getting terms mixed up.
It was a bad example -- not close enough to actual LLVM. :-)
> What do the parametrized types give you that you don't get from using
> opaque instead of T?
Possibly nothing. I don't really understand the limitations of
2020 Aug 05
2
CentOS Security Advisories OVAL feed??
On 04/08/2020 23:50, Jon Pruente wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 4, 2020 at 11:34 AM <centos at niob.at> wrote:
>
>> Q5) If the answer to the last question is "no": shouldn't there be such
>> a resource?
>>
> CentOS doesn't publish security errata. If you need it then you should
> either buy RHEL, or deal with putting together your own set up with
>