similar to: Using gutenbergr with a firewall

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1300 matches similar to: "Using gutenbergr with a firewall"

2018 Feb 14
0
Using gutenbergr with a firewall
Saying "a firewall" is like saying "a weapon". Some firewalls are much more strict than others, and yours may be different than any someone here might have encountered. You might also be having trouble with anti virus software. -- Sent from my phone. Please excuse my brevity. On February 13, 2018 10:55:40 PM PST, Patrick Connolly <p_connolly at slingshot.co.nz> wrote:
2018 Jan 24
1
Function gutenberg_download in the gutenbergr package
I've been working through https://www.tidytextmining.com/tidytext.html wherein everything worked until I got to this part in section 1.5 > hgwells <- gutenberg_download(c(35, 36, 5230, 159)) Determining mirror for Project Gutenberg from http://www.gutenberg.org/robot/harvest Error in open.connection(con, "rb") : Failed to connect to www.gutenberg.org port 80: Connection
2009 Dec 14
6
write.csv and header
Dear list, I would like to export a matrix to a TXT-File by using write.csv (not necessarily). Is there a way to add a header (with additional informations concerning the project) spanning multiple lines to this file before the actual data are listed up? Should look like this: date: filename: number of permutations: ------------ data (as a matrix) Any suggestions? Thnx in advance.
2018 Feb 02
2
Updating Rcpp package when it is claimed by dplyr
Or, to avoid accusing you of lying. what you think is "vanilla" probably isn't. What exactly did you do? On Unix-likes, I would do something like this echo 'options(repos=list(CRAN="cran.r-project.org"));install.packages("Rcpp")' | R --vanilla (or maybe https://cloud.r-project.org is better...) -pd > On 2 Feb 2018, at 08:15 , Jeff Newmiller
2018 Feb 02
0
Updating Rcpp package when it is claimed by dplyr
On Fri, 02-Feb-2018 at 10:25AM +0100, peter dalgaard wrote: |> Or, to avoid accusing you of lying. what you think is "vanilla" |> probably isn't. What exactly did you do? On Unix-likes, I would do |> something like this |> echo 'options(repos=list(CRAN="cran.r-project.org"));install.packages("Rcpp")' | R --vanilla |> |> (or maybe
2018 Feb 02
2
Updating Rcpp package when it is claimed by dplyr
When i tried to install the hunspell package, I got this error message: Error: package ?Rcpp? 0.12.3 was found, but >= 0.12.12 is required by ?hunspell? So I set about installing a new version of Rcpp but I get this message: Error in unloadNamespace(pkg_name) : namespace ?Rcpp? is imported by ?dplyr? so cannot be unloaded How does one get around that? I tried installing Rcpp in a
2009 Jul 09
2
Mysteriously vanishing LD_LIBRARY_PATH
Using R-2.8.0 and R-2.8.1, I get behaviour like this: R version 2.8.0 (2008-10-20) Copyright (C) 2008 The R Foundation for Statistical Computing ISBN 3-900051-07-0 [....] > Sys.getenv("LD_LIBRARY_PATH") LD_LIBRARY_PATH
2013 Jan 22
4
Simple use of dcast (reshape2 package)
Suppose I have a small dataframe > aa Target Eaten ID 50 TPP 0 1 51 TPP 1 2 52 TPP 3 3 53 TPP 1 4 54 TPP 2 5 50.1 GPA 9 1 51.1 GPA 11 2 52.1 GPA 8 3 53.1 GPA 8 4 54.1 GPA 10 5 And I want to reshape it into ID TPP GPA 1 1 0 9 2 2 1 11 3 3 3 8 4 4 1 8 5 5 2 10 I realise that
2017 May 18
2
[R] R-3.4.0 fails test
On Wed, 17-May-2017 at 01:21PM +0200, Peter Dalgaard wrote: |> |> Anyways, you might want to |> |> a) move the discussion to R-devel |> b) include your platform (hardware, OS) and time zone info System: Host: MTA-V1-427894 Kernel: 3.19.0-32-generic x86_64 (64 bit gcc: 4.8.2) Desktop: KDE Plasma 4.14.2 (Qt 4.8.6) Distro: Linux Mint 17.3 Rosa Machine: System:
2018 Feb 02
0
Updating Rcpp package when it is claimed by dplyr
Your last statement is extremely unlikely to be true. The dplyr package should not be present in a vanilla environment, so there should be no such conflict. -- Sent from my phone. Please excuse my brevity. On February 1, 2018 11:00:01 PM PST, Patrick Connolly <p_connolly at slingshot.co.nz> wrote: >When i tried to install the hunspell package, I got this error >message: >
2017 May 19
1
[R] R-3.4.0 fails test
On Thu, 18-May-2017 at 05:46PM +0200, Martin Maechler wrote: |> ..... |> |> Being pretty "stretched" time wise currently, I'm happy for |> timezone-portable propositions to change the test. Meantime, anyone who lives where DST happpens in December who wants to get through the remaining tests can avoid this one by changing the line > stopifnot(length(fd) == 10,
2017 May 18
2
[R] R-3.4.0 fails test
This has to do with your own timezone. If I run that code on my computer, both formats are correct. If I do this after Sys.setenv(TZ = "UTC") Then: > cbind(format(dlt), format(dct)) [,1] [,2] [1,] "2016-12-06 21:45:41" "2016-12-06 20:45:41" [2,] "2016-12-06 21:45:42" "2016-12-06 20:45:42" The reason for that, is that
2008 May 30
2
Including a tilde in a plotmath-type call
Suppose I have a plot plot(1:10, pch = "") And I want some text to indicate a Normal distrubition. I could do this: text(5, 6, substitute(X~~~~N(mu, sigma^2)), adj = 0) text(5.35, 6, "~", adj = 0) But that's clumsy, and depending on your plotting device, might not even look sensible. I'd prefer to be able to do it more directly and simply the way these do: text(5,
2011 Nov 21
1
Comments disappearing from local functions (R 2.14.0)
I've installed R-2.14.0 from source on CentOS and on Kubuntu and in both cases, I see something I've never seen before. Comments in locally written functions disappear. I put comments there for a purpose and I'd like to keep them. I can still use older versions of R without that happening. Nothing I noticed in the NEWS file seems to indicate a change that could be related to that
2009 Dec 23
1
Unwanted association between a function and a namespace
I can't understand how the plyr package is turning up here: > sessionInfo() R version 2.10.1 (2009-12-14) i686-pc-linux-gnu locale: [1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC=C [3] LC_TIME=en_US.UTF-8 LC_COLLATE=en_US.UTF-8 [5] LC_MONETARY=C LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8 [7] LC_PAPER=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NAME=C [9] LC_ADDRESS=C LC_TELEPHONE=C [11]
2017 May 18
2
[R] R-3.4.0 fails test
> On 18 May 2017, at 13:47 , Joris Meys <jorismeys at gmail.com> wrote: > > Correction: Also dlt uses the default timezone, but POSIXlt is not recalculated whereas POSIXct is. Reason for that is the different way values are stored (hours, minutes, seconds as opposed to minutes from origin, as explained in my previous mail) > I would suspect that there is something more subtle
2009 Aug 17
6
graph label greek symbol failure
Readers, Previous questions about this requirement have been for m$ users, my failure occurs using linux. I have tried to add the delta (?) symbol to the y axis label and the result is &D, using the command: ...ylab="?t"... Any advice please? rhelp at conference.jabber.org mandriva 2008 r 251 (27-06-07)
2016 Apr 13
0
R 3.2.4-revised is released
My CRAN mirror still says this: The latest release (Thursday 2016-03-10, Very Secure Dishes) R-3.2.4.tar.gz, read what's new in the latest version. Should that not be updated? Anyone who has not seen that post won't know to look further. On Wed, 16-Mar-2016 at 08:39PM +0000, Peter Dalgaard wrote: |> The 3.2.4 release had two annoyances which we would rather not have |> in
2007 Dec 05
1
confidence intervals for y predicted in non linearregression
Hi Thanks for your suggestion, I'm trying to install this package in Ubuntu (7.10) but unsuccessfully. Also tried in MacOSX, and no success too. _____ De: Ndoye Souleymane [mailto:ndoye_p@hotmail.com] Enviado el: miércoles, 05 de diciembre de 2007 13:38 Para: bady@univ-lyon1.fr; Florencio González CC: r-help@stat.math.ethz.ch Asunto: RE: [R] confidence intervals for y predicted in
2016 Mar 16
2
R 3.2.4-revised is released
The 3.2.4 release had two annoyances which we would rather not have in an "ultra-stable" release, designed to hang around for the duration of the 3.3 series. One was a relatively minor Makefile issue affecting system using R's bundled lzma library. The other, rather more serious, affected printing and formatting of POSIXlt objects, which would unpredictably get the Daylight Savings