Displaying 20 results from an estimated 20000 matches similar to: "Documentation examples for lm and glm"
2018 Dec 14
7
Documentation examples for lm and glm
FWIW, before all the examples are changed to data frame variants, I think there's fairly good reason to have at least _one_ example that does _not_ place variables in a data frame.
The data argument in lm() is optional. And there is more than one way to manage data in a project. I personally don't much like lots of stray variables lurking about, but if those are the only variables out
2018 Dec 15
2
Documentation examples for lm and glm
A pragmatic solution could be to create a simple linear regression example
with variables in the global environment and then another example with a
data.frame.
The latter might be somewhat more complex, e.g., with several regressors
and/or mixed categorical and numeric covariates to illustrate how
regression and analysis of (co-)variance can be combined. I like to use
MASS's whiteside
2018 Dec 16
3
Documentation examples for lm and glm
On Sat, 15 Dec 2018, frederik at ofb.net wrote:
> I agree with Steve and Achim that we should keep some examples with no
> data frame. That's Objectively Simpler, whether or not it leads to
> clutter in the wrong hands. As Steve points out, we have attach()
> which is an excellent language feature - not to mention with().
Just for the record: Personally, I wouldn't recommend
2018 Dec 13
0
Documentation examples for lm and glm
Agree. Or just create the data frame with those variables in it
directly ...
On 2018-12-13 3:26 p.m., Thomas Yee wrote:
> Hello,
>
> something that has been on my mind for a decade or two has
> been the examples for lm() and glm(). They encourage poor style
> because of mismanagement of data frames. Also, having the
> variables in a data frame means that predict()
> is more
2018 Dec 15
0
Documentation examples for lm and glm
I would argue examples should encourage good practice. Beginners ought to
learn to keep data in data frames and not to overuse attach(). Experts can
do otherwise at their own risk, but they have less need of explicit
examples.
On Fri, 14 Dec 2018 at 14:51, S Ellison <S.Ellison at lgcgroup.com> wrote:
> FWIW, before all the examples are changed to data frame variants, I think
>
2018 Dec 17
0
Documentation examples for lm and glm
Dear Martin,
I think that everyone agrees that it?s generally preferable to use the data argument to lm() and I have nothing significant to add to the substance of the discussion, but I think that it?s a mistake not to add to the current examples, for the following reasons:
(1) Relegating examples using the data argument to ?see also? doesn?t suggest that using the argument is a best practice.
2018 Dec 15
0
Documentation examples for lm and glm
I agree with Steve and Achim that we should keep some examples with no
data frame. That's Objectively Simpler, whether or not it leads to
clutter in the wrong hands. As Steve points out, we have attach()
which is an excellent language feature - not to mention with().
I would go even further and say that the examples that are in lm() now
should stay at the top. Because people may be used to
2018 Dec 17
0
Documentation examples for lm and glm
Dear Heinz,
----------------------------------------------
> On Dec 17, 2018, at 10:19 AM, Heinz Tuechler <tuechler at gmx.at> wrote:
>
> Dear All,
>
> do you think that use of a data argument is best practice in the example below?
No, but it is *normally* or *usually* the best option, in my opinion.
Best,
John
>
> regards,
>
> Heinz
>
> ###
2018 Dec 17
0
Documentation examples for lm and glm
Thanks for the discussion. I do feel quite strongly that
the variables should always be a part of a data frame. Then
functions such as summary() and pairs() can operate on them all
simultaneously.... regression is only one part of the analysis. And
what if there are lots of variables? Have them all scattered
about the workspace? One of them could be easily overwritten.
The generic predict() will
2018 Dec 17
0
Documentation examples for lm and glm
Dear Steve,
Since this relates as well to the message I posted a couple of minutes before yours, I agree that it?s possible to phrase ?best practices? too categorically. In the current case, I believe that it?s reasonable to say that specifying the data argument is ?generally? or ?usually? the best option. That doesn?t rule out exceptions.
Best,
John
2006 Sep 28
2
safe prediction from lm
I am fitting a regression model with a bs term and then making predictions
based on the model. According to some info on the internet at
http://www.stat.auckland.ac.nz/~yee/smartpred/DummiesGuide.txt
there are some problems with using predict.lm when you have a model with
terms such as bs,ns,or poly. However when I used one of the examples they
said would illustrate the problems I get virtually
2005 Jun 27
2
R v2.1.1 for Windows and "non-reproducible" crashes
Hi,
R v2.1.1 patched (2005-05-26) for Windows crashes. The sympotoms are
like "memory leakage". The patched version from two days ago crashes at
a different position in R CMD check compared to todays version.
A "REPRODUCIBLE" EXAMPLE:
Unfortunately, I cannot create a minimal code example reproducing the
crash, but here is at least a simple way to reproduce it:
1. Make
2006 Jun 22
2
weights in lm, glm (PR#9023)
Full_Name: James Signorovitch
Version: 2.2.1
OS: WinXP
Submission from: (NULL) (134.174.182.203)
In the code below, fn1() and fn2() fail with the messages given in the comments.
Strangely, fn2() fails for all data sets I've tried except for those with 100
rows.
The same errors occur if glm() is used in place of lm(), or if R 2.1.1 is used
on a unix system. Thanks for looking into this.
2005 Sep 01
1
controlling where *.Rout gets printed. Possible?
OK, my journey to make lab machines automagically install & update all
desirable R packages is nearing an end! The only question I have now is
this: How can I control where the system prints the *.Rout file that is
created automatically when the R batch program runs. In "man R" I don't
find any information about it. When the cron job runs "R_installAll.sh"
(see
2007 Mar 16
1
Invalidating inaccessible SEXP?
Is there a (C or R) function to invalidate the relevant parts of SEXP
/ data that are inaccessible? My problem is in tracking down
protection and other memory mismanagement bugs, where I have to rely
on luck to invalidate or overwrite data to trigger a detectable
error. This makes it hard to track down a bug (it sometimes doesn't
occur), or to know that a patch fixes the problem.
Thanks,
2014 Nov 25
2
[PATCH] check-gnu-efi.sh: print the output of build-gnu-efi.sh
> _ The gnu-efi git repository is currently partially unavailable. Trying
> to retrieve older commits (as the one used in the official release of
> Syslinux 6.03 stable) might succeed, but, at this moment, trying to
> retrieve the official gnu-efi master head will fail.
Update: after several days, the gnu-efi master head is now available
again.
I do not discard the possibility
2004 Aug 20
8
wxruby-swig: where does wxclasses-2.4.2.xml comes from?
Was trying to understand more about the internals of wxruby-swig, where
does the big chunk of XML comes from? I saw something similiar in
Python, is that massaged out of there?
The codes produced by extractxml.rb and wxclasses-2.4.2.xml is quite
different from the original header files. Just for example the WxDialog
class.
OnXXX are non-virtual in WxWidgets, but virtual in wxruby-swig
2010 Feb 05
2
glm models with more than one response
Hi everyone,
I am trying to construct a glm and am running into a couple of questions.
The data set I am using consists of 6 categories for the response and 6
independent predictors representing nutrient concentrations at sample point
locations. Ultimately I'd like to use the probabilities for each response
category in a simulation model such that these probabilities are used to
define a
2005 Nov 23
1
survdiff for Left-truncated and right-censored data
dear all,
I would like to know whether survdiff and survReg function in the
survival package work for left-truncated and right-censored data.
If not, what other functions can i use to make comparison between two
survival curves with LTRC data.
thanks for any help given
sing yee
2004 Jan 26
3
Fortran source code
Hi,
I am wondering if it is possible to view the Fortran source code called by
R functions.
In particular, I am interested in the "leaps.setup" function in a
package called "leaps", which calls Fortran functions "ssleaps", "initr"
etc.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Ka Yee Yeung
Bioinformatics Scientist
Dept of Microbiology
University of