similar to: Wine tools 9 not compatable with wine 9.0.17

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 4000 matches similar to: "Wine tools 9 not compatable with wine 9.0.17"

2007 Mar 19
1
Can not install Wine tools
-- I get the following error message when I try to turn the RPM file into a tgz file. root@wizard:/home/vince# rpm2tgz winetools-0.9-3joi386.rpm /usr/bin/rpm2tgz: line 98: winetools-0.9-3joi386.rpm: No such file or directory /usr/bin/rpm2tgz: line 99: winetools-0.9-3joi386.rpm: No such file or directory Ultima Linux rocks: http://www.ultimalinux.com/ultima-central.html
2005 Oct 27
2
RSQLite problems
Hi, I'm experimenting with using (R)SQLite to do data management. Here are two little problems that I've encountered: 1. The presence of ',' in string values causes trouble since ',' is also the delimiter used in the SQL statement. 2. A newline '\n' line attached to the last string value of each row. Some examples: > library (RSQLite) Loading required
2004 Feb 12
2
lattice: showing panels for factor levels with no values
How to show panels for factor levels of conditioning variables which do have no values? E.g. there are panels for "Grand Rapids" when they have values: data( barley ) with( barley, dotplot(variety ~ yield | year * site, layout=c(6,2) ) ) There are no panels for "Grand Rapids" when there are no values for "Grand Rapids": my.barley <- subset( barley, ! ( site ==
2012 Nov 15
1
strip.custom() with more than one conditioning variable
Suppose I wanted to plot the barley data like this: dotplot(variety ~ yield | year+ site, barley, strip = strip.custom(style = 4)) The factor levels are far too long for that to be useful. I can overcome that problem if I shorten the levels like this: dotplot(variety ~ yield | year + site, barley, strip = strip.custom(style = 4, factor.levels =
2006 Dec 08
1
lattice: defining an own function using args for "formula" and "groups"
x.fun <- function( formula, data ) dotplot( formula, data ) x.grp <- function( formula, groups, data ) dotplot( formula, groups, data ) data( barley ) > x.fun( variety ~ yield | site, data=barley ) # no problem > dotplot( variety ~ yield | site, groups=year, data=barley ) # no problem > x.grp( variety ~ yield | site, groups=year, data=barley ) object "year" not found
2006 Jul 07
2
dotplot (lattice) with panel.segments and groups
Hi, The following produces almost exactly what I needed. The problems are that the 'panel.dotplot' call (commented) generates the error 'Error in NextMethod("[") : argument "subscripts" is missing, with no default'. The other problem is that the colors alternate between the levels of the 'site' variable, rather than 'year'. barley$yield2
2004 Sep 13
1
Adding ranks to a repeatedly ragged array
How can I add an extra column containing the rank to a ragged array indexed by more than one grouping factors? E.g. with the barley dataset: How can I to add an additional column ``rank'' containing the rank of the ``yield'' of the different varieties in relation to the indices ``year'' and ``site'' to the barley dataframe? I achieved to calculate the ranks with:
2006 Jan 25
2
panel function with barchart (lattice)
Folks at R help, I can't quite get the panel function to work the way I want within barchart. I guess I'm still not understanding how to piece together multiple panel arguments, especially when "groups" is specified. Example: I want to be able to add the value of "yield" to each section of each bar in this graph: barchart(yield ~ variety | site, data = barley,
2010 Dec 06
2
ggplot2: Controlling line width of panel borders
Dear R-users, i encountered some problems when trying to adjust the line width of the axes and stripes in a plot created with ggplot2. I use the "barley" dataset of the lattice package to illustrate my problem: library(ggplot2) library(lattice) barley[["SD"]] <- 5 limits <- aes(ymax=barley$yield + barley$SD,ymin=barley$yield - barley$SD) p1 <-
2004 Sep 29
2
lattice .ps graphic is rotated in LaTeX slides
I've generated a version of the classic dotplot of the barley data with library(lattice) data(barley) trellis.device("postscript", color=TRUE, file="barley2x3.ps") old.settings <- trellis.par.get() trellis.par.set("background", list(col = "white")) lset(list(superpose.symbol=list(pch=c(19, 1, 25, 2, 15, 22, 23),
2010 Jan 24
2
different x-axes in Lattice
I use lattice package and 'barchart' to build a chart. I have a problem with setting different x-axes. Some x categories are missing but they are display and I don't want. I use scales = list(y = "free",x="free") but it works only for y-axes. Simple example: package(lattice) barchart(yield ~ variety | site, data = barley, groups = year, layout = c(1,6),
2018 Apr 27
1
[FORGED] Extracting specified pages from a lattice ("trellis") object.
Hi Does this not do what you want ... ? allpages <- dotplot(variety ~ yield | year * site, data=barley, layout=c(2,2)) page2 <- allpages[1:2, 3:4] print(page2) Paul On 24/04/18 17:51, Rolf Turner wrote: > > On 24/04/18 15:17, Paul Murrell wrote: > >> Hi >> >> I think the subsetting works by giving you the panels for the >>
2005 Jun 01
1
font size in the trellis plot
>library(lattice) >dotplot(variety ~ yield | site, data = barley, groups = year, key = simpleKey(levels(barley$year), space = "right"), xlab = "Barley Yield (bushels/acre) ", aspect=0.5, layout = c(1,6), ylab=NULL) and i get the plot whose font overlaps .what parematers should i change.(i do not want to change the size of the plot).
2018 Apr 24
0
[FORGED] Extracting specified pages from a lattice ("trellis") object.
On 24/04/18 15:17, Paul Murrell wrote: > Hi > > I think the subsetting works by giving you the panels for the > corresponding levels of the conditioning variable(s).? Note that, if > there is more than one conditioning variable, you will need more than > one subsetting index. > > For example, taking this plot with two conditioning variables and 12 > panels in
2006 May 07
10
How to get IE6 stable?
Hello, I installed IE6 with both WineTools and IEs4Linux (under different user accounts). Most of the features work, but IE often hangs. Then I can only kill the process. Has someone got IE6 stable under WINE? If so, which WINE version do I have to use and how shall I configure it? Thanks in advance, Colin Finck
2007 Jan 30
1
change plotting symbol for groups in trellis graph
Hi, how can I change the plotting symbol for the groups in a trellis panel dotplot. My graph is similar to: library(trellis) dotplot(variety ~ yield | site, data = barley, groups = year, key = simpleKey(levels(barley$year), space = "right"), xlab = "Barley Yield (bushels/acre) ", aspect=0.5, layout = c(1,6), ylab=NULL) I'd like to
2009 Sep 26
1
Lattice, stripplot (xyplot), plotting data with median line, numeric x-axis
All, On p.52 of Deepayan Sarkar's Lattice book there is a nice plot of showing residuals with median lines superimposed or various groups: library("lattice") stripplot(sqrt(abs(residuals(lm(yield~variety+year+site)))) ~ site, data = barley, groups = year, jitter.data = TRUE, type = c("p", "a"), fun = median) Suppose we wanted to make a similar plot for a
2010 May 07
3
How to sort a grouped barchart?
Hi, I have a barchart very similar to the example on the function documetation, however, I want to sort the bars according one group in one panel. Reminding: library(lattice) barchart(yield ~ variety | site, data = barley, groups = year, layout = c(1,6), ylab = "Barley Yield (bushels/acre)", auto.key=list(), scales = list(x = list(abbreviate = TRUE,
2009 Dec 08
3
re-ordering x-lables using barchart()
Hi R Users, I'm trying to re-order the "site names" ("Waseca", "Morris", ...). I'm using following code: libarry(lattice) barchart(yield ~ variety | site, data = barley, groups = year, layout = c(6,1), aspect=.7, ylab = "Barley Yield (bushels/acre)", scales = list(x = list(abbreviate = TRUE, rot=45,
2018 Apr 24
2
[FORGED] Extracting specified pages from a lattice ("trellis") object.
Hi I think the subsetting works by giving you the panels for the corresponding levels of the conditioning variable(s). Note that, if there is more than one conditioning variable, you will need more than one subsetting index. For example, taking this plot with two conditioning variables and 12 panels in total ... dotplot(variety ~ yield | year * site, data=barley) ... this produces three