Displaying 20 results from an estimated 5000 matches similar to: "significance test interquartile ranges"
2016 Apr 19
2
Interquartile Range
Hi,
I am trying to show an interquartile range while grouping values using
the function ddply(). So my function call now is like
groupedAll <- ddply(data
,~groupColumn
,summarise
,col1_mean=mean(col1)
,col2_mode=Mode(col2) #Function I wrote for getting the
mode shown below
2016 Apr 19
0
Interquartile Range
Are you aware that there *already is* a function that does this?
?IQR
(also your "function" iqr" is just a character string and would have
to be parsed and evaluated to become a function. But this is a
TERRIBLE way to do things in R as it completely circumvents R's
central functional programming paradigm).
Cheers,
Bert
Bert Gunter
"The trouble with having an open mind
2016 Apr 19
0
Interquartile Range
Hi Michael,
At a guess, try this:
iqr<-function(x) {
return(paste(round(quantile(x,0.25),0),round(quantile(x,0.75),0),sep="-")
}
.col3_Range=iqr(datat$tenure)
Jim
On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 11:15 AM, Michael Artz <michaeleartz at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
> I am trying to show an interquartile range while grouping values using
> the function ddply(). So my function
2016 Apr 19
5
Interquartile Range
That didn't work Jim!
Thanks anyway
On Mon, Apr 18, 2016 at 9:02 PM, Jim Lemon <drjimlemon at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Michael,
> At a guess, try this:
>
> iqr<-function(x) {
> return(paste(round(quantile(x,0.25),0),round(quantile(x,0.75),0),sep="-")
> }
>
> .col3_Range=iqr(datat$tenure)
>
> Jim
>
>
>
> On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at
2016 Apr 19
0
Interquartile Range
> That didn't work Jim!
It always helps to say how the suggestion did not work. Jim's
function had a typo in it - was that the problem? Or did you not
change the call to ddply to use that function. Here is something
that might "work" for you:
library(plyr)
data <- data.frame(groupColumn=rep(1:5,1:5), col1=2^(0:14))
myIqr <- function(x) {
2016 Apr 19
1
Interquartile Range
HI that did not work for me either. The value I got returned from that
function was "<rounded mean> - <rounded mean>" :(. thanks for the reply
through
On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 10:34 AM, William Dunlap <wdunlap at tibco.com> wrote:
> > That didn't work Jim!
>
> It always helps to say how the suggestion did not work. Jim's
> function had a typo
2016 Apr 19
2
Interquartile Range
To be precise:
paste(round(quantile(x,0.25),0),round(quantile(x,0.75),0),sep="-")
is an expression that evaluates to a character string:
"round(quantile(x,.25),0) - round(quantile(x,0.75),0)"
no matter what the argument of your function, x. Hence
return(paste(...)) will return this exact character string and never
evaluates x.
Cheers,
Bert
Bert Gunter
"The
2016 Apr 19
0
Interquartile Range
NO NO -- I am wrong! The paste() expression is of course evaluated.
It's just that a character string is returned of the form "something -
something".
I apologize for the confusion.
-- Bert
Bert Gunter
"The trouble with having an open mind is that people keep coming along
and sticking things into it."
-- Opus (aka Berkeley Breathed in his "Bloom County"
2016 Apr 19
2
Interquartile Range
... and I'm getting another cup of coffee...
-- Bert
Bert Gunter
"The trouble with having an open mind is that people keep coming along
and sticking things into it."
-- Opus (aka Berkeley Breathed in his "Bloom County" comic strip )
On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 10:30 AM, Bert Gunter <bgunter.4567 at gmail.com> wrote:
> NO NO -- I am wrong! The paste() expression is
2016 Apr 19
0
Interquartile Range
Oh thanks for that clarification Bert! Hope you enjoyed your coffee! I
ended up just using the transform argument in the ddply function. It
worked and it repeated, then I called a mode function in another call to
ddply that summarised. Kinda hacky but oh well!
On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 12:31 PM, Bert Gunter <bgunter.4567 at gmail.com>
wrote:
> ... and I'm getting another cup of
2016 Apr 19
2
Interquartile Range
If you show us, not just tell us about, a self-contained example
someone might show you a non-hacky way of getting the job done.
(I don't see an argument to plyr::ddply called 'transform'.)
Bill Dunlap
TIBCO Software
wdunlap tibco.com
On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 12:18 PM, Michael Artz <michaeleartz at gmail.com>
wrote:
> Oh thanks for that clarification Bert! Hope you enjoyed
2016 Apr 19
0
Interquartile Range
Hi,
Here is what I am doing
notGroupedAll <- ddply(data
,~groupColumn
,summarise
,col1_mean=mean(col1)
,col2_mode=Mode(col2) #Function I wrote for getting the
mode shown below
,col3_Range=myIqr(col3)
)
groupedAll <- ddply(data
,~groupColumn
,summarise
2016 Apr 20
2
Interquartile Range
Well, instead of your functions try:
Mode <- function(x) {
tabx <- table(x)
tabx[which.max(tabx)]
}
and use R's IQR function instead of yours.
... so I still don't get why you want to return a character string
instead of a value for the IQR;
and the mode of a sample defined as above is generally a bad estimator
of the mode of the distribution. To say more than that would
2016 Apr 20
0
Interquartile Range
Hi,
Jumping into this thread mainly on the point of the mode of the distribution, while also supporting Bert's comments below on theory.
If the vector 'x' that is being passed to this function is an integer vector, then a tabulation of the integers can yield a 'mode', presuming of course that there is only one unique mode. You may have to decide how you want to handle a
2016 Apr 20
0
Interquartile Range
???
IQR returns a single number.
> IQR(rnorm(10))
[1] 1.090168
To your 2nd response:
"I could have used average, min, max, they all would have returned the
same thing., "
I can only respond: huh?? Are all your values identical?
You really need to provide a small reproducible example as requested
by the posting guide -- I certainly don't get it, and I'm done
guessing.
2016 Apr 20
2
Interquartile Range
Again, IQR returns two both a .25 and a .75 value and it failed, which is
why I didn't use it before. Also, the first function just returns tha same
value repeating. Since they are the same, before the second call, using
the mode function is just a way to grab one value. I could have used
average, min, max, they all would have returned the same thing.
Mike
On Tue, Apr 19, 2016 at 7:24 PM,
2011 Feb 23
5
mgcv: beta coefficient and 95%CI
Hi i am doing an environmental research
The equation is as follow:
gam(y1 ~ x1 + s(x2) + s(x3) + s(x4), family = gaussian, fit = true)
I would like to obtain the beta coefficient and 95CI of x4 (or s(x4)), what
should I do?
Thanks,
Lung
--
View this message in context: http://r.789695.n4.nabble.com/mgcv-beta-coefficient-and-95-CI-tp3320491p3320491.html
Sent from the R help mailing list
2005 Sep 22
2
R: extracting elements in a matrix
Dear R-users
For a given matrix of dimension, say (n,p), I'd like to extract for every
column those elements that are bigger than twice the interquartile range of
the corresponding column.
Can I get these elements without using a loop?
Thank you for your help
Frank
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
2010 Jun 04
1
Boxplot: what is shown by default?
hi,
i'm using /"boxplot()"/ to show some data:
x <- c(0.99, 0.97, 0.91, 0.72, 1.00, 0.99, 1.02, 0.90, 0.91, 0.90, 1.02,
0.90, 1.35, 1.01, 0.92)
boxplot(x)
is it correct when i say: /"Boxes represent interquartile ranges (IQRs);
bold horizontal lines, medians; whiskers, lowest and highest values
still within 1.5 x IQR; open circles, outliers."?
/thanks in advance
2011 Feb 24
1
Boxplot not doing what I think it should
My box plot below is drawing its upper whisker all the way to the last point, instead of showing the point as an outlier. Am I misunderstanding, or is it a bug?
Help(boxplot) states for the parameter ?range? that ?this determines how far the plot whiskers extend out from the box. If range is positive, the whiskers extend to the most extreme data point which is no more than range times the