similar to: How to create a table structure in Java code?

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 600 matches similar to: "How to create a table structure in Java code?"

2017 Oct 26
3
How to create a table structure in Java code?
That's amazing! Thank you!!! One follow up question, if that's OK? If, instead of using hard-coded CSV, I read the CSV into a variable first, then it fails again with a parse error. Code below. So, if I read the CSV into a variable, do I need an additional wrapper method? Seems like it should still work. Thanks in advance for your reply. -M String inputIris =
2017 Oct 26
1
How to create a table structure in Java code?
Thanks! I just figured it out (thanks to "Beyond Compare") and was coming here to post back. The boxM test doesn't work with that (now, finally working) REXP structure, but I probably now need to create a table or something and parse that structure. So much fun! :) Thanks again. - M Sent from [ProtonMail](https://protonmail.com), Swiss-based encrypted email. > --------
2017 Oct 26
0
How to create a table structure in Java code?
I suspect that you are looking for something like: read.csv(textConnection( "5.1,3.5,1.4,0.2,setosa 4.9,3,1.4,0.2,setosa 4.7,3.2,1.3,0.2,setosa 4.6,3.1,1.5,0.2,setosa 5,3.6,1.4,0.2,setosa" ), header = FALSE) HTH, Jan On 25-10-17 12:50, Morkus via R-devel wrote: > Hi all, > > Using RConsole, it's easy to get data from the database that you can use in an R Command. Like
2017 Oct 26
0
How to create a table structure in Java code?
You are entering the quoting hell - you are missing quotes and escapes for \n. it would be much more reasonable to use the rConnection.assign method instead of pasting any content through the parser. Cheers, Simon > On Oct 26, 2017, at 9:59 AM, Morkus via R-devel <r-devel at r-project.org> wrote: > > That's amazing! Thank you!!! > > One follow up question, if
2017 Oct 27
4
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
It can't be this hard, right? I really need a shove in the right direction here. Been spinning wheels for three days. Cannot get past the errors. I'm doing something wrong, obviously, since I can easily compute the Box's M right there in RStudio But I don't see what is wrong below with the coding equivalent. The entire code snippet is below. The code fails below on the call to
2017 Oct 28
2
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
I'm not sure what you mean. Could you please be more specific? If I print the string, I get: boxM(boxMVariable[, -5], boxMVariable[, 5]) From this code: . . . // assign the data to a variable.rConnection.assign("boxMVariable", myDf); // create a string command with that variable name.String boxVariable = "boxM(boxMVariable[, -5], boxMVariable[, 5])";
2017 Oct 28
2
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
Thanks Duncan. Awesome ideas! I think we're getting closer! I tried what you suggested and got a possibly better error... . . . rConnection.assign("boxMVariable", myDf); String resultBV = "str(boxMVariable)"; // your suggestion. RESULTING ERROR: Error in format.default(nam.ob, width = max(ncn), justify = "left") : invalid 'width' argument (No idea
2017 Oct 28
2
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
Hey Duncan, Hard to debug? That's an understatement. Eyes bleeding.... In any case, I tried all your suggestions. To get "integer" for the final column, I had to change the code to get integers instead of strings. double[] d1 = ((REXPVector) ((RList) tableRead).get(0)).asDoubles(); double[] d2 = ((REXPVector) ((RList) tableRead).get(1)).asDoubles(); double[] d3 = ((REXPVector)
2017 Oct 29
2
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
Thanks Duncan. I can't tell you how helpful all your terrific replies have been. I think the biggest surprise is that nobody appears to be using Java and R together like I"m trying to do. I suppose it should be a surprise since there are no books on the subject and almost no technical documentation other than a few sites here and there. ----- I originally had the "int" as the
2017 Oct 29
3
Renjin?
Hi All, OK, in the "back to the drawing board" department, I found what looks like a much better solution to using R in Java. Renjin. Looking at the docs and then trying a quick example, didn't quite work. Of course I'm missing something. Although I'm telling the engine to require ("biotools") just like I would in R itself, when I get to the line of code that
2007 Sep 08
1
Suppress 'x' when appending to a csv file
Is there any convenient way to supress the x that appears in csv export files? I would like to be able to export a file and add a comment to it yet still be able to read it back into R. I don't see any way to get rid of the x that seperates the different appended parts. Thanks EXAMPLE x 1 2 3 4 5 x #Results from file SSS.r R.2.5.1 Windows XP
2017 Oct 27
0
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
Just print the string you are asking to R to evaluate. It doesn't make any sense as an R expression. Fix that, and things will work. Duncan Murdoch On 27/10/2017 3:41 PM, Morkus via R-devel wrote: > It can't be this hard, right? I really need a shove in the right direction here. Been spinning wheels for three days. Cannot get past the errors. > > I'm doing something
2017 Oct 27
0
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
Does it work if you supply the closing parenthesis on the call to boxM? The parser says the input is incomplete and a missing closing parenthesis would cause that error.. // create a string command with that variable name.String boxVariable = "boxM(boxMVariable [,-5], boxMVariable[,5]"; // try to execute the command... // FAILS with org.rosuda.REngine.Rserve.RserveException: eval
2017 Oct 28
0
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
On 28/10/2017 6:26 AM, Morkus wrote: > I'm not sure what you mean. Could you please be more specific? You were trying to eval an expression that you constructed in Java. I was suggesting that before you eval it, you print it. > > If I print the string, I get: *boxM(boxMVariable[, -5], boxMVariable[, 5])* Right, that's what I was suggesting you do. Now you've fixed the
2017 Oct 28
0
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
On 28/10/2017 7:12 AM, Morkus wrote: > Thanks Duncan. Awesome ideas! > > I think we're getting closer! > > I tried what you suggested and got a possibly better error... > . > . > . > rConnection.assign("boxMVariable", myDf); > > *String resultBV *= *"str(boxMVariable)"*; *// your suggestion.* > > *RESULTING ERROR:* > >
2017 Oct 28
0
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
On 28/10/2017 8:59 AM, Morkus wrote: > Hey Duncan, > > Hard to debug? That's an understatement. Eyes bleeding.... > > In any case, I tried all your suggestions. To get "integer" for the > final column, I had to change the code to get integers instead of strings. The last column in iris is actually a factor. That's stored as an S3-classed integer vector
2017 Oct 29
0
Cannot Compute Box's M (Three Days Trying...)
On 29/10/2017 7:26 AM, Morkus wrote: > Thanks Duncan. I can't tell you how helpful all your terrific replies > have been. > > I think the biggest surprise is that nobody appears to be using Java and > R together like I"m trying to do. I suppose it should be a surprise > since there are no books on the subject and almost no technical > documentation other than a
2009 Mar 19
4
Import R-output into Java
Hello, I want to import R-output via Rserve to Java, especially for the function ctree from the package party. Rserve is working properly. Yet, I only get the predictions with the Java code try{ RConnection c = new RConnection(); ... c.voidEval("modell <- ctree(...)"); REXP y = c.eval("nodes(modell,1)[[1]]$prediction"); ...
2017 Oct 24
2
Creating a data table (frame?) from a SQL Statement?
Hello, I'm new to R so this is probably a simple question for somebody. I have an RScript that reads a CSV on the disk using read.table(...). It then does a boxM test using that data. However, I'm now trying to load the same data via an SQL command, but I can't seem to get the data structure defined so R will like it -- using the included "iris" dataset. I've tried
2010 Apr 28
2
JRI API: sourcing from Java String
Hi all, I have been using 'source(filename)' to load R code from a file object. However, now I have a special case where I don't have a file since I am loading an R script from a Jar file. I would like to avoid creating temporary files. Is there a way to use the 'source' command with a Java String? Are there any other, better ways to do that? Ralf