similar to: Dropping Calls, irregular interval no logs

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1000 matches similar to: "Dropping Calls, irregular interval no logs"

2004 Mar 29
9
Aggregating frequency of irregular time series
> S-Plus has the function AggregateSeries() whose name is self > explanatory. For instance one can derive monthly series from daily > ones by specifying end-of-period, averages, sums, etc. I looked for > a similar function in the packages "its" and "tseries", but found > nothing. I also help.searched() for aggregate to no avail. Would > anybody be so kind
2004 Dec 03
4
Polycom 500, won't ring??
Hi, I have was testing some of the different ring types with my polycom 500, and the ALERT_INFO settings. Now when my phone receives a call it won't ring. All the other phones ring fine, and my phone wasn't the only one I rebooted with the changed sip.conf and impd.conf. I have reverted back to a standard sip.conf and impd.conf and I still can not get my phone to ring for any incoming
2009 Mar 31
4
what is the preferred method to create a package local variable?
for the moment, I'm using: .onAttach <- function(libname, pkgname) { .bbg.db.conn <<- dbConnect(dbDriver("PostgreSQL"), user="blah","blah") } .onUnload <- function(libpath) { dbDisconnect(.bbg.db.conn) } which results in a hidden global variable in the global environment. I would prefer to make the assignment only in the package namespace.
2009 May 19
4
ext3 efficiency, larger vs smaller file system, lots of inodes...
(... to Nabble Ext3:Users - reposted by me after I joined the ext3-users mailing list - sorry for the dup...) A bit of a rambling subject there but I am trying to figure out if it is more efficient at runtime to have few very large file systems (8 TB) vs a larger number of smaller file systems. The file systems will hold many small files. My preference is to have a larger number of smaller file
2017 Jan 03
2
[R] Problems when trying to install and load package "rzmq"
On Tue, Jan 3, 2017 at 3:53 PM, Whit Armstrong <armstrong.whit at gmail.com> wrote: > > I maintian the rzmq project. > > love to get it running on windows, but zmq doesn't play nicely with R's > mingw. It's fairly easy to link against the libraries from rwinlib: https://github.com/rwinlib/zeromq. I'll send you a pull request later this week to fix the binary
2006 Nov 08
4
[LLVMdev] Fortran and LLVM
Hi all, I'm looking into using LLVM to do some optimisations of Fortran code. As part of this, I've been trying to build the frontend with f95 support. At the moment, I'm trying to resolve undefined symbol problems for code defined in c-common.c + elsewhere - I'm taking the temporary approach of copy-pasting it into a new file, and linking that in. I have no idea if it will
2003 Sep 17
3
Building and loading a DLL on Windows NT
I am trying to build a simple dll with Rcmd SHLIB to link into R. The results of the build are below. From my limited knowledge of building DLLs, it looks like it worked (I didn't get any errors). F:\R\dlls> Rcmd SHLIB add.C making add.d from add.C g++ -IC:/PROGRA~1/R/src/include -Wall -O2 -c add.C -o add.o ar cr add.a *.o ranlib add.a g++ --shared -s -o add.dll add.def add.a
2004 Sep 09
4
scoping rules
Can someone help me with this simple example? sq <- function() { y <- x^2 y } myfunc <- function() { x <- 10 sq() } myfunc() executing the above in R yields: > myfunc() Error in sq() : Object "x" not found I understand that R's scoping rules cause it to look for "x" in the environment in which "sq" was defined (the global environment in
2003 Mar 11
2
changing pen mode [or adjusting for overlapping points?]
I'm ploting a rather large number of points [~24,000] in two series with slightly different distributions. I would like to be able to effectively see where the two distributions overlap by setting the pen mode (or it's equivalent) to allow the overlapping portion to show up as a different color (or different shade). Unfortunatly, I couldn't find an option in par or postscript that
2011 Apr 20
3
[LLVMdev] Is this a bug in clang?
This code is undefined, meaning that all bets are off, don't do it. I.e. It reads the value of I between two sequence points and uses it for something other than determining the value written. From: Csaba Raduly Sent: Tuesday, April 19, 2011 3:44 AM To: Joe Armstrong Cc: llvmdev at cs.uiuc.edu Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Is this a bug in clang? Hi Joe On Tue, Apr 19, 2011 at 10:59 AM, Joe
2006 Jul 27
3
deparse(substitute(foo))
I see that plot.default uses deparse(substitute(x)) to extract the character name of an argument and put it on the vertical axis. Hence: foo <- 1:10 plot( foo ) will put the label "foo" on the vertical axis. However, for a function that takes a "..." list as an input, I can only extract the first argument name: x <- 1:10 y <- 10:20 foo <- function(...) {
2004 Dec 07
3
Continuance on Polycom issue, not ringing
Ok, so I emailed the list earlier about my polycom phone not ringing when anyone called in. Well, polycom support said that is impossible that this could happen because of a change in a configuration file. However the new phone arrived today (a refurb.) and it also would not ring. So I obviously got rather frustrated and blasted away all of my configuration files from the FTP server. I then copied
2004 Oct 25
1
copyright issues when package maintainer changes
I will be taking over as maintainer of the its package from Giles Heywood. The code was originally written while he was working at Commerzbank. I have added the header below to the top of the R source file to indicate the changes in the copyrights for the code. The package was originally released under GPL2. I have no experience with copyright issues, and would appreciate it if someone who does
2004 Dec 08
4
Polycom 500 - Dialtone while connected
I just set up a Polycom 500 on *. Every few calls I make, the call connects and the receiving party can hear me (thru Broadvoice), but I still get ringing on my end, as if they never picked up. * logs look just fine. Does any one have any suggestions? Thanks. ________________________________ Adam S. Robins Executive Vice President & CIO PHARMACENTRA, LLP 5901B Peachtree Dunwoody
2011 Apr 27
3
[LLVMdev] confused about float literals
On Wed, Apr 27, 2011 at 12:51 AM, John McCall <rjmccall at apple.com> wrote: > On Apr 26, 2011, at 2:07 AM, Joe Armstrong wrote: >> Compiles (via clang) to: >> >>  ; ModuleID = 'test101.c' >>  target datalayout = >>
2009 Jul 09
6
Active Directory Integration Problems
Hello everyone, I have setup Samba 3.0.28a on an Ubuntu 8.04 server. The setup that I am working with is an exact copy (as far as I can tell) if an identical installation that I did on a test box. Kerberos is setup and working properly. I can use kinit to issue tickets. The box has been successfully joined to the Active Directory domain. I can enumerate AD users and groups. I can log
2012 May 17
2
test suites for packages
Can anyone share some opinions on test suites for R packages? I'm looking at testthat and RUnit. Does anyone have strong opinions on either of those. Any additional packages I should consider? Thanks, Whit
2008 Oct 28
2
color individual bar of histogram?
Anyone know a quick way to color one bar of a histogram? I want to mark the bar in which the most recent observation falls. So, for instance: x <- rnorm(100) latest.ob <- x[100] hist(x) ## how do I mark the bucket that latest.ob falls into? Thanks, Whit
2008 Dec 11
2
is there a way to recursilvely lapply
for a simple example: x <- list() x[["a"]] <- list(a=c(1,2,3),b=c(3,4,5)) x[["b"]] <- list(a=c(6,7,8),b=c(9,10,11)) lapply(x,sum) this fails w/ Error in FUN(X[[1L]], ...) : invalid 'type' (list) of argument Just wondering if I have overlooked something obvious. one can also do: lapply(x,lapply,sum) but that assumes that you already know how many levels
2011 Apr 19
2
[LLVMdev] Is this a bug in clang?
Hello, Is this a bug in clang, or a bug in my thinking? /Joe Armstrong /* When I compile the following program I get different answers in clang and gcc. $ gcc bug2.c $ ./a.out j = 40 $ clang bug2.c $ ./a.out j = 41 I think the correct answer is 41. If my understanding of C is correct (which, or course, it might not be) the incremented value of i++ is first made available