similar to: StructTS

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 2000 matches similar to: "StructTS"

2012 Mar 23
2
Fwd: The StructTS method
To whomever it may concern, I'm a young Industrial Engineer working on Senior Design at Georgia Tech and have found the StructTS method to be excellent for the training set for my forecasting project. There's only one problem: I don't actually understand what a Structural Time Series IS. I've looked up resources on it, and get that essentially you're dividing the Time
2013 Feb 06
2
R for Windows 32-bit mode versus 64-bit mode
Hi All: We are developing (actually updating) a piece of code that runs in R. Due to some limitations of some the libraries we use, at the present time we would be limited to the 32-bit version of R on Windows. Does anyone have a feel (or even real knowledge) if most people these days run R on Windows in 32-bit or 64-bit mode? This would affect some development decisions. Thanks -Roy M.
2007 Jun 12
2
[OT]Web-Based Data Brushing
I apologize for the off-topic post, but my Google search did not turn up much and I thought people on this list my have knowledge of this. I am looking for examples of data brushing (i.e. dynmaic linked plots) either on a web site, or in a web-based application, such as an AJAX app. Even better if there is a way to do this in R. Thanks for any help. -Roy M. **********************
2007 Jul 02
1
download.file - it works on my Mac but not on Windows.
Hi: I am working with someone remotely to allow them access to our data. The follow command using "download.file" works perfectly on my Mac: > > download.file(url="http://oceanwatch.pfeg.noaa.gov:8081/thredds/ > wcs/satellite/AG/ssta/14day? > request=GetCoverage&version=1.0.0&service=WCS&format=NetCDF3&coverage= >
2012 Feb 19
1
time-series trend classification
Hello everyone, I was looking for a way to classify time-series based on the curve-fit. I try to campute several trends so i was thinking to link each trend with a function. increase with exponential for example, increase and decrease with a gaussian etc. The possiblities are endless though and it seems that is not always working well, especially if you work on small time-series (of 5-10 points
2012 Jan 16
1
A recent Post
From the r-help posting guidelines: > Good manners: Remember that customs differ. Some people are very direct. Others surround everything they say with hedges and apologies. Be tolerant. Rudeness is never warranted, but sometimes `read the manual' is the appropriate response. Don't waste time discussing such matters on the list. Ad hominem comments are absolutely out of place. It
2017 Oct 17
2
ggridges help
yes, thanks, and I was getting close to that. One thing I found is the manual says the height is the distance above the y-line, which should be, but doesn't have to be positive. In fact, the time series are estimates of a cycle, and has negative values, which unfortunately are not included in my sub-sample. And the negative values are not handled properly (the series disappears for
2017 Oct 17
0
ggridges help
The min_height = -0.25 is there to make it show cycle values down to -1/4. You may want to change it to -1 so it shows more of the cycle values. Bill Dunlap TIBCO Software wdunlap tibco.com On Tue, Oct 17, 2017 at 1:26 PM, Roy Mendelssohn - NOAA Federal < roy.mendelssohn at noaa.gov> wrote: > yes, thanks, and I was getting close to that. One thing I found is the > manual says the
2011 Jul 29
5
HIRHAM netcdf files
Can someone help me out with a "small" problem? I've started using netcdf files recently, and I want to extract the grid id and also the coordinates from a HIRHAM netcdf file. I know how to extract a slice of dataset both in space and in time and I also know the area that this file should cover, however I have no idea regarding the reference for both LAT/LON and RLAT/RLON. I tried
2018 Jan 02
1
httr::content without message
Thanks to all that replied. I had just looked through the httr code and sure enough for a .csv mime time it calls readr::read_csv(). The httr::content docs suggest not using automatic parsing in a package, rather to determine mime type and parse yourself and Ben's suggestion also works if I do: junk <- readr::read_csv(r1$content, col_types = cols()) Perfect. Using httr rather than
2008 Mar 15
1
How to create following chart for visualizing multivariate time series
Let me take an artifical matrix : dat = matrix(rnorm(200*200), 200, 200) My goal is to visualize this matrix according to the procedure, described in previous mails. I took Mendelssohn's advice and got following advice : ?plot.im Z <- setcov(owin()) plot(Z) .................... etc However I can not reproduce this example in my problem. How I can change my data
2017 Oct 17
2
ggridges help
I have tried: ggplot(plotFrame, aes(x = time, y = cycle, height = cycle, group = depth)) + geom_ridgeline() ggplot(plotFrame, aes(x = time, y = depth, height = cycle, group = depth)) + geom_ridgeline() ggplot(plotFrame, aes(x = time, y = depth, group = depth)) + geom_density_ridges() none are producing a plot that was a ridgeline for each depth showing the time series at that depth. The plot
2017 Oct 17
0
ggridges help
Does the following work for you? ggplot2::ggplot(plotFrame, aes(x = time, y = depth, height = cycle, group = depth)) + ggridges::geom_ridgeline(fill="red", min_height=-0.25) Bill Dunlap TIBCO Software wdunlap tibco.com On Tue, Oct 17, 2017 at 12:43 PM, Roy Mendelssohn - NOAA Federal < roy.mendelssohn at noaa.gov> wrote: > I have tried: > > ggplot(plotFrame, aes(x =
2008 May 22
6
Alternatives to rJava and JRI
Has anyone come across any alternatives to rJava and JRI? Are they any good? Better perhaps? Please give your reasons. Thanks, Danish - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - This message is intended only for the personal and confidential use of the designated recipient(s) named above. If you are not the intended recipient of this message you are
2017 Aug 29
0
RMarkdown question
Although it is not an elegant solution, but if your output format is HTML, you can add an arbitrary empty HTML element like <span id="foo"></span> before your code chunk. Then you can jump to this <span> via a link like "see [this code chunk](#foo)". Regards, Yihui -- https://yihui.name On Tue, Aug 29, 2017 at 1:30 PM, Roy Mendelssohn - NOAA Federal
2018 Jan 02
4
httr::content without message
Hi All: I am using httr to download files form a service, in this case a .csv file. When I use httr::content on the result, I get a message. Since this will be in a package. I want to suppress the message, but haven't figured out how to do so. The following should reproduce the result: myURL <-
2018 Jan 02
0
httr::content without message
Ahoy! That's a message generated by the readr::read_table() function (or it's friends). You can suppress it a number of ways, but this should work as httr::content() will pass through arguments, like col_types = cols(), to the file reader. junk <- httr::content(r1, col_types = cols()) See more here... https://blog.rstudio.com/2016/08/05/readr-1-0-0/
2017 Jun 01
1
Reversing one dimension of an array, in a generalized case
Thanks again. I am going to try the different versions. But I probably won't be able to get to it till next week. This is probably at the point where anything further should be sent to me privately. -Roy > On Jun 1, 2017, at 1:56 PM, David L Carlson <dcarlson at tamu.edu> wrote: > > On the off chance that anyone is still interested, here is the corrected function using
2017 Aug 29
3
RMarkdown question
Hi All: In creating a R Notebook I know that in the text I can link to a (sub) section by using the command: [Header 1](#anchor) and putting the appropriate anchor name at the appropriate header. But can the same be done for code chunks, if the code chunk is named? What I want to do is say that such and such code chunk is an example of how to do something, and have that link to the
2017 Jun 01
3
Reversing one dimension of an array, in a generalized case
> On 1 Jun 2017, at 22:42, Roy Mendelssohn - NOAA Federal <roy.mendelssohn at noaa.gov> wrote: > > Thanks to all for responses/. There was a question of exactly what was wanted. It is the generalization of the obvious example I gave, > >>>> junk1 <- junk[, rev(seq_len(10), ] > > > so that > > junk[1,1,1 ] = junk1[1,10,1] > junk[1,2,1] =