similar to: Tcl8.0.4 missing function?! (PR#1640)

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 4000 matches similar to: "Tcl8.0.4 missing function?! (PR#1640)"

2004 Sep 17
1
controlling printing precision in paste()
Rene, Look at ?format. Sean On Sep 17, 2004, at 9:21 AM, RenE J.V. Bertin wrote: > Hello, > > I can't seem to find the way to modify the precision with which > paste() prints its floating point numbers, more precisely the number > of decimal digits printed. This is apparently not controlled by > options( digits= ), and there is no appropriate argument to paste() >
2002 Apr 30
1
Undefined symbols in loading tcltk (PR#1499)
Non of these errors occured in earliers versions of R. > library(tcltk) /usr/lib/dld.sl: Unresolved symbol: Tcl_GetVar2Ex (code) from /opt_local/opt/R/lib/R/library/tcltk/libs/tcltk.sl /usr/lib/dld.sl: Unresolved symbol: Tcl_GetString (code) from /opt_local/opt/R/lib/R/library/tcltk/libs/tcltk.sl /usr/lib/dld.sl: Unresolved symbol: Tcl_SetVar2Ex (code) from
2001 Mar 24
1
Telling tcltk where tcl is?
The installation of R I'm using (R 1.2.0 on Redhat Linux (R-base-1.2.0-2.i386.rpm)) apparently expects to find tcl in ./share/tcl8.0, ./share/tcl8.0 or /usr/local/share/tcl8.0: > library (tcltk) Error in firstlib(which.lib.loc, package) : Can't find a usable init.tcl in the following directories: ./share/tcl8.0 ./share/tcl8.0 /usr/local/share/tcl8.0 However, tcl is installed in
2004 Nov 18
4
Re: changing (core) function argument defaults?
>From: Patrick Connolly <p.connolly@hortresearch.co.nz> >To: "RenE J.V. Bertin" <rjvbertin@hotmail.com> >Subject: Re: [R] changing (core) function argument defaults? >Date: Thu, 18 Nov 2004 11:43:10 +1300 > >On Wed, 20-Oct-2004 at 07:48PM +0200, RenE J.V. Bertin wrote: > >|> Hello,
2004 Nov 18
4
Re: changing (core) function argument defaults?
>From: Patrick Connolly <p.connolly@hortresearch.co.nz> >To: "RenE J.V. Bertin" <rjvbertin@hotmail.com> >Subject: Re: [R] changing (core) function argument defaults? >Date: Thu, 18 Nov 2004 11:43:10 +1300 > >On Wed, 20-Oct-2004 at 07:48PM +0200, RenE J.V. Bertin wrote: > >|> Hello,
2005 Nov 11
0
strange classification behaviour
You could use cut. The key calculation would be: w <- .05; eps <- 1e-5 breakpoints <- seq(min(kk), max(kk), .05) breakpoints <- floor( (breakpoints + (w/2) + eps) / w) * w values <- cut(kk, c(breakpoints, Inf), right = FALSE) values <- ordered(values) If you don't like the labels produced add lab = breakpoints as a cut arg. On 11/10/05, RenE J.V. Bertin
2002 Jun 10
2
Crashing R (PR#1651)
Concerns: R 1.5.0 gui version, Windows (downloaded binary) and Linux (installed from sources). # Load the data from the attached file: kk<-read.table("__filename__", header=1) # attach the data: attach(kk) Snr<-factor(Snr) # fool around with a call to anova.glm(): anova.glm( aov( nFD~Type+size+Modality+Error(Snr/(Type+size+Modality)) ) ) # Error: object nFD not found # Well, I
2003 Feb 27
2
multidimensional function fitting
Take a look at package mgcv. Hope this helps. --Matt -----Original Message----- From: RenE J.V. Bertin [mailto:rjvbertin at despammed.com] Sent: Thursday, February 27, 2003 1:39 PM To: r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: [R] multidimensional function fitting Hello, I have been looking around for how to perform a multidimensional, arbitrary function fit (in any case non-linear; more below),
2001 Nov 11
4
png output requires X connection (PR#1165)
Full_Name: Dirk Eddelbuettel Version: 1.3.1 OS: Linux Submission from: (NULL) (65.184.214.9) [ This bug report has previously been filed as #115186 in the Debian Bug Tracking System. --edd ] From: Ryan Murray <rmurray@cyberhqz.com> Subject: r-base: png output requires X connection To: submit@bugs.debian.org Date: Wed, 10 Oct 2001 13:40:06 -0700 Package: r-base Version: 1.3.1-2
2002 Jun 07
1
Bug list summary (automatic post)
================================================= This is an automated summary of the status of the R-bugs repository. Note that this may be neither complete nor perfectly correct at any given instance: Not all bugs are reported, and some reported bugs may have been fixed, but the repository not yet updated. Some bug fixes are difficult to verify because they pertain to specific hardware or
2005 Feb 15
2
summary(aov(...)) into a string?
It doesn't print anything: the summary.aov (or summary.aovlist) print method does. ?summary.aov tells you the structure of the objects they return. On Tue, 15 Feb 2005, RenE J.V. Bertin wrote: > I'd like to annotate a plot with the output of summary(aov(model)), > ideally just with the significant effects. I don't find a means to > redirect what that command prints into
2002 Jul 09
3
portable snprintf implementation
This may be of interest: http://www.ijs.si/software/snprintf/ It looks like this version may well be more complete and conform the standards than the version that comes with R. BTW: I am currently patching unix/sys_std.c and modules/gtkconsole.c such that they don't store lines in the history that are identical to the previous line. Is there any interest in posting those patches here? RenE
2005 Jun 23
4
contrats hardcoded in aov()?
On 6/23/05, RenE J.V. Bertin <rjvbertin at gmail.com> wrote: > Hello, > > I was just having a look at the aov function source code, and see that when the model used does not have an Error term, Helmert contrasts are imposed: > > if (is.null(indError)) { > ... > } > else { > opcons <- options("contrasts") >
2002 Oct 17
1
manova with Error?
Let's say I have a within-subject experiment with 2 observables, obs1 and ob2 and 2 independent factors, fac1 and fac2. I can do summary( aov( obs1~fac1*fac2 + Error(Subject/(fac1*fac2)) ) ) summary( aov( obs2~fac1*fac2 + Error(Subject/(fac1*fac2)) ) ) to test the 2 observables separately. > summary( fit<-manova( cbind(obs1,obs2)~fac1*fac2 + Error(Subject/(fac1*fac2)) ) ) gives
2002 Jul 08
1
subset, once more
New to R, I had the bad idea to send a bug report about '[' not knowing it had a drop= argument. Now, I wonder about the absence of this argument in subset... In both availabe methods (see below), there is a ... argument, but this argument is not used in either. Rather, subset.data.frame explitictly passes drop=F in 1 instance. Before I start patching (for my own use): what is the
2002 Jun 17
1
overzealous help-links.sh script! (PR#1682)
Starting html help in the current version of R has a very annoying side-effect. It indiscriminantly removes $HOME/.R, and replaces it with a virgin copy. I discovered that when all of a sudden I got complaints about my startup "library" not being found. Below is a modified version of the script that doesn't do this. It is not perfect yet (it shouldn't try to recreate links
2002 Jun 19
4
levels() counter-intuitif? (PR#1693)
Suppose I have a factor size with levels "small", "medium" and "large". Then, when I subset this factor: >ss<-size[size!="medium"] to get at the extremes, >levels(ss) .... Levels: large medium small The same happens with >subset( size, size!="medium") I understand that the resulting factor inherits the possible levels from its
2005 Jan 17
2
bwplot: how not to draw outliers
RenE J.V. Bertin wrote: > Hello, and (somewhat belated) best wishes for 2005. > > Can one order not to draw outliers in bwplot, or at least exclude them from the vertical axis scaling? If so, how (or what doc do I need to consult)? > The options that have this effect in boxplot() do not appear to have any effect with bwplot (although outline=FALSE in boxplot does *not* change the
2002 Oct 22
1
negative numbers in R plots in Illustrator 8 (and higher?) (PR#2199)
Negative numbers in (encapsulated) postscript generated by R loose their sign when opened in Adobe Illustrator 8 (french). This was so in 1.5.x and remains in 1.6.0. I suppose that this is a known issue, although it is rather a flaw in Illustrator than in R, if my analysis of it is correct. I sent a lengthy mail containing a solution (ISOLatin1Encoding has to be redefined) to the r-help mailing
2003 Feb 27
0
[despammed] RE: multidimensional function fitting
If something like the second-order function does not fit your data well, it may well be that the data do not admit a simple structure that you can easily code in C. If you expect the structure of the function to be simple, tell gam() so by specifying a small dimensional basis (via the k= argument in s()). This will probably ease the computational burden. HTH, Andy > -----Original