similar to: Documentation detail [was: Merging factor levels.]

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1000 matches similar to: "Documentation detail [was: Merging factor levels.]"

2001 Nov 12
1
Survey: R in Pharma
Hi All, We're interested in finding other users of R in pharmaceutical companies. Please reply if you are or know of someone who is. -Greg Gregory R. Warnes, Ph.D. Pfizer Global Research and Development LEGAL NOTICE Unless expressly stated otherwise, this message is confidential and may be privileged. It is intended for the addressee(s) only. Access to this E-mail by anyone else is
2007 Jul 03
1
R 2.5.1 - ?factor examples, details
Hi, R people. In ?factor, in the "Examples:" section, we see: ## suppose you want "NA" as a level, and to allowing missing values. (x <- factor(c(1, 2, "NA"), exclude = "")) is.na(x)[2] <- TRUE x # [1] 1 <NA> NA, <NA> used because NA is a level. is.na(x) # [1] FALSE TRUE FALSE I'm a bit confused by this example, as I
2005 Apr 09
1
R-generated animation of a polynomiograph
Hi, people. Two days ago, I sent to this list a little toy for exploring polynomiographs (yet, the mathematical formulas were not polynomials anymore, so the name is not really appropriate). After studying R calls, expressions and functions a bit more, I gave myself the homework of producing an animation out of my recent toy. The resulting animation, and also the sources, are available at:
2005 Apr 01
1
R mailing list archive difficulty
Hi, people! This is my first babble on this list, please be kind! :-) Last Tuesday, I wrote to the (likely) Webmaster of the R site to report a little problem, but also to ask for advice about how to get a bulk copy of the mailing list archives, from 2002 to now. While I quite understand that from Tuesday to now, there has been little time, and it is only normal that I did not receive a reply
2007 Aug 29
1
Excel (off-topic, sort of)
Except for the ability to perform circular recalculation, I believe that the closest programming analogy to a spreadsheet is a functional programming language. Check out Haskell (or LISP or Erlang) to do what you describe. -----Original Message----- From: r-help-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch [mailto:r-help-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch] On Behalf Of Fran?ois Pinard Sent: Wednesday, August 29, 2007
2006 May 14
1
Suggestion for system.time()
Hi, people. A tiny suggestion for the system.time function. Could the returned vector have names? These could be like: c("User", "System", "Elapsed", "Sub.User", "Sub.System") That would then produce self-documenting output. -- Fran?ois Pinard http://pinard.progiciels-bpi.ca
2005 Apr 11
2
R_LIBS difficulty ?
Hi, R people. I'm shy reporting this, as a bug in this area sounds very unlikely. Did I make my tests wrongly? I'm still flaky at all this. Let me dare nevertheless, who knows, just in case... Please don't kill me! :-) Not so long ago, I wrote to this list: > (For now, [the library code] works only for me when I do _not_ use `-l > MY/OWN/LIBDIR' at `R CMD INSTALL'
2006 May 15
2
Truncated labels in hist (PR#8864)
Hi, people. Executing the following command: hist(rpois(100,5), labels=TRUE) yields a graphic in which some labels are truncated (on an X11 device). The truncated labels are those over the highest bars. The hist function should ideally manage enough room for the labels, automatically. (Specifying ylim solves my problem, but yet, hist could be frienlier.) --please do not edit the
2006 May 09
1
"Unfelicity" :-) with edit()
Hi, people. This is about R 2.3.0 under Linux. It seems that edit() may change a function environment. Here is a transcript, more comments follow: ======================================================================> > fix(f) > f function () { } > fix(f) Erreur dans edit(name, file, title, editor) : une erreur s'est produite ? la ligne 3 utilisez une commande du
2007 Aug 27
1
R 2.5.1 - Rscript through tee
Hi, people. I met a little problem for which someone might have a solution. Let's say I have an executable file (named "pp.R") with this contents: #!/usr/bin/Rscript options(echo=TRUE) a <- 1 Sys.sleep(3) a <- 2 If I execute "./pp.R" at the shell prompt, the output shows the timely progress of the script as expected. If I use "./pp.R | tee
2005 Nov 20
1
mapply() gives seg fault (PR#8332)
--KsGdsel6WgEHnImy Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1; format=flowed Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Hi, people. Wandering in R archives, and seeing the message attached below, I noticed that: mapply(rep,times=1:4, MoreArgs=42) still segfaults on R 2.2.0, and thought I should be a good citizen and report it, even if I do not have an actual problem
2006 May 10
1
Mere chat on vectorisation matters
Hi, people. Allow me to chat a tiny bit on two vectorisation-related matters, in the context of R. I'm curious about if the following ideas have ever been considered, and rejected already. First is about using the so-called Duff's device for partially unrolling loops. I did not overly check in R sources, and am not familiar with them anyway, but the only usage I saw is within
2006 May 18
0
?hist and $density explanation
Hi, people. Within ?hist (using R 2.3.0), one reads: density: values f^(x[i]), as estimated density values. If 'all(diff(breaks) == 1)', they are the relative frequencies 'counts/n' and in general satisfy sum[i; f^(x[i]) (b[i+1]-b[i])] = 1, where b[i] = 'breaks[i]'. I trip on this explanation each time I read it. Some R guardians will be
2006 May 27
0
Correction to ?alist (PR#8904)
Hi, people. ?alist says: 'alist' is like 'list', except in the handling of tagged arguments with no value. As written, this description is misleading. For example: > list(e=3+5) $e [1] 8 > alist(e=3+5) $e 3 + 5 We are not in the situation of tagged arguments with no value, and then, clearly, 'list' and 'alist' behave
2006 Jun 03
0
Irregularity in stem() display (PR#8934)
Hi, R people. Consider the following small R session: ======================================================================> > a <- c(8.48, 9.58, 9.96) > stem(a) The decimal point is at the | 8 | 8 | 5 9 | 9 | 6 10 | 0 > stem(round(a,1)) The decimal point is at the | 8 | 5 9 | 9 | 6 10 | 0
2006 Jul 16
2
Matrices given to pt? [was: [R] for loops and counters]
Hi, people. I was a bit intrigued by the message quoted below. Indeed, if pt() is given a matrix, it returns a matrix. Should this feature be documented? ?pt speaks about "a vector of quantiles", and says nothing about the type of what it returns. The same might presumably apply to other distribution-related functions. ----- Forwarded message from Martyn Plummer <plummer at
2006 Jan 05
1
Suggestion for big files [was: Re: A comment about R:]
> -----Original Message----- > > [ronggui] > > >R's week when handling large data file. I has a data file : 807 vars, > >118519 obs.and its CVS format. Stata can read it in in 2 minus,but In > >my PC,R almost can not handle. my pc's cpu 1.7G ;RAM 512M. > > Just (another) thought. I used to use SPSS, many, many years ago, on > CDC machines, where
2002 Feb 12
1
rsync error: received SIGUSR1 or SIGINT (code 20) at rsync.c(229)
Trying to rsync between win2k machines. rsync version is 2.5.3pre (downloaded today) This is the message after 368100 files have been checked: rsync error: received SIGUSR1 or SIGINT (code 20) at rsync.c(229) My cmdline is : c:\sbin\rsync\rsync -az /cygdrive/d/Home xxx@xxx.skelleftea.se::dropZone/GY/ba-disk01 --stats -v -P --timeout=84600 I have tried with both with and without -z (-az or -a)
2006 Jan 05
1
Suggestion for big files [was: Re: A comment about R:]
ronggui wrote: > If i am familiar with > database software, using database (and R) is the best choice,but > convert the file into database format is not an easy job for me. Good working knowledge of a DBMS is almost invaluable when it comes to working with very large data sets. In addition, learning SQL is piece of cake compared to learning R. On top of that, knowledge of another (SQL)
2005 Apr 06
0
Polynomiographic function in R :-)
Hi, people. Nothing too serious in this message. Nevertheless, all criticism or advice is welcome :-). Yesterday, I went to a conference by Bahman Kalantari (Rutgers University) about Polynomiography (the Fine Art and Science of Visualizing Polynomials). Since I'm starting my R learning, I decided to try using it for computing some (any!) polynomiograph. I was surprised about how easy and