similar to: Heads-up: r2u installs (only) to /usr/lib/R/site-library.

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 7000 matches similar to: "Heads-up: r2u installs (only) to /usr/lib/R/site-library."

2024 Sep 29
1
Is there a sexy way ...?
Admit it, Rolf. Haven't you wondered if S, in a more private way, is sexier than R? OK, kidding aside, we have talked this to death. Just FYI, the conversation was stimulating for some of us and I have continued on my own and located functions I see as useful in the stringi and stringr packages to make my silly version ever less silly! LOL! -----Original Message----- From: Rolf Turner
2024 Feb 28
1
Interactions in regression
Hi Rolf, No it is not. I don't know to which question did you want to respond ? I desribed everything in my first email and attached links from SO with pictures included, which are quite understandable. Cheers, Jacek wt., 27 lut 2024 o 02:29 Rolf Turner <rolfturner at posteo.net> napisa?(a): > > I have no real idea what you are trying to do, but if a table is > what you
2024 Apr 22
1
x[0]: Can '0' be made an allowed index in R?
Heh. Did anyone bring up negative indices yet? -pd > On 22 Apr 2024, at 10:46 , Rolf Turner <rolfturner at posteo.net> wrote: > > > See fortunes::fortune(36). > > cheers, > > Rolf Turner > > -- > Honorary Research Fellow > Department of Statistics > University of Auckland > Stats. Dep't. (secretaries) phone: > +64-9-373-7599
2024 Feb 05
1
Help
Please see fortunes::fortune(285). cheers, Rolf Turner -- Honorary Research Fellow Department of Statistics University of Auckland Stats. Dep't. (secretaries) phone: +64-9-373-7599 ext. 89622 Home phone: +64-9-480-4619
2024 Apr 22
1
x[0]: Can '0' be made an allowed index in R?
See fortunes::fortune(36). cheers, Rolf Turner -- Honorary Research Fellow Department of Statistics University of Auckland Stats. Dep't. (secretaries) phone: +64-9-373-7599 ext. 89622 Home phone: +64-9-480-4619
2024 May 07
1
Is there some way to customize colours for the View output?
On Tue, 7 May 2024 06:34:50 -0400 Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.duncan at gmail.com> wrote: > On 07/05/2024 6:31 a.m., Iago Gin? V?zquez wrote: > > Thanks Duncan. > > > > I am currently on Windows. Is there any solution for it? > > Switch to Linux or MacOS? Fortune nomination! cheers, Rolf Turner -- Honorary Research Fellow Department of Statistics University of
2024 Sep 29
1
Is there a sexy way ...?
On Sat, 28 Sep 2024 10:26:31 +0100 CALUM POLWART <polc1410 at gmail.com> wrote: > Avi > > I fear this was all a huge social experiment. > > Testing if a post titled "sexy way" would increase engagement... <SNIP> I conjecture that this conjecture was tongue-in-cheek. Be that as it were ??, let me assure everyone that such was not my intention. The usage
2024 Dec 02
1
Fortune nomination.
On Sun, 1 Dec 2024 21:43:45 -0800 Bert Gunter <bgunter.4567 at gmail.com> wrote: > Finally, my best advice would be to forget about SAS if you wish to > use R. Trying to translate SAS paradigms into R is the devil's work. cheers, Rolf Turner -- Honorary Research Fellow Department of Statistics University of Auckland Stats. Dep't. (secretaries) phone:
2024 Feb 27
1
Interactions in regression
I have no real idea what you are trying to do, but if a table is what you want, you can probably get it using the table() function. Or, more likely, the xtabs() function. Using your example from an earlier post (adjusted to make it comprehensible to the human mind): set.seed(1000) time <- factor(rep(c("Pre","Post"),each=200)) treatment <-
2024 May 13
1
Is there some way to customize colours for the View output?
Hi all, I've just could test your suggestions on using dataedit... entries now, and indeed they work... partially. See, please, the next screenshot: https://ibb.co/Dkn2pVs dataedituser modifies the red borders dataedittext the yellow text dataeditfg... I do not know, specified to green the output of View(mtcars) does not change from that of the screenshot dataeditbg is the (almost) black
2006 Sep 15
0
Trouble installing modified package
I am updating the CRAN package LMGene, and I'm having trouble installing the new version. I changed the working package name to WLMG so I could use the new version without removing the old version from the R directory. I set up R_LIBS to allow installation in a different directory. When I did R CMD INSTALL -l /linux-ws/tilling/Rlib WLMG it put the right files in the right place. However,
2023 Aug 13
1
Is r2u at 3.4.1?
I am putting this here as it may be of general and not just my own interest.? I am currently running 4.3.1 on Ubuntu 22.04.2 LTS but am hitting an issue that the magick package won't update because libmagick++-dev won't update because, presumably, of two repositories in my sources.list disagreeing about versions required.? That's not so urgent an issue for me that I wont just wait
2024 May 13
1
Is there some way to customize colours for the View output?
I just tried it on an old Windows computer. I don't see dataeditfg in the preferences menu; I think it is the internal variable name used for "dataedittext". The row and column names don't appear to be controllable from that menu, they seem (on my machine) to be displayed in the same colour as the background of a dialog box, i.e. some kind of gray. I don't think R
2024 Nov 26
1
Using vi syntax in command line editing.
I have recently acquired a new laptop. (My old one was giving me ominous messages on boot-up, about possible hard drive problems.) I want to get everything running "just as it was" on the old laptop (So that I can stay in my comfort zone). In particular, I would like to do command line editing with vi syntax, which is what I am used to. I cannot for the life of me remember how I told
2012 Sep 19
1
Setting library path (again)
Hi, Sorry for posting a question that has been asked before but I couldn't quite find the right answer in previous help topics. I am trying to set my library path to a user-specified library ("C:/Users/K/Documents/Work/RLib"). I have used .libPaths("C:/Users/K/Documents/Work/RLib") but when I check the .libPaths(), both the user-specified and default libraries appear. It
2024 Apr 22
2
x[0]: Can '0' be made an allowed index in R?
You could have negative indices. There are two ways to do this. 1) provide a large offset. Offset <- 30 for (i in -29 to 120) { print(df[i+Offset])} 2) use absolute values if all indices are negative. for (i in -200 to -1) {print(df[abs(i)])} Tim -----Original Message----- From: R-help <r-help-bounces at r-project.org> On Behalf Of Peter Dalgaard via R-help Sent: Monday, April 22,
2024 Apr 23
1
x[0]: Can '0' be made an allowed index in R?
Doesn't sound like you got the point. x[-1] normally removes the first element. With 0-based indices, this cannot work. - pd > On 22 Apr 2024, at 17:31 , Ebert,Timothy Aaron <tebert at ufl.edu> wrote: > > You could have negative indices. There are two ways to do this. > 1) provide a large offset. > Offset <- 30 > for (i in -29 to 120) { print(df[i+Offset])} >
2024 Jan 14
1
Fwd: Strange results : bootrstrp CIs
On Sat, 13 Jan 2024 17:59:16 -0500 Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.duncan at gmail.com> wrote: <SNIP> > My guess is that one of the bootstrap samples had a different > selection of countries, so factor(Country) had different levels, and > that would really mess things up. > > You'll need to decide how to handle that: If you are trying to > estimate the coefficient for
2001 Dec 20
2
library()
I've just installed version 1.4.0 of R, and am experiencing a puzzling phenomenon with the library() function. I have .lib.loc set as follows: > .lib.loc [1] "/usr/local/lib/R/library" "/home/faculty/rolf/Rlib" If I invoke > library(melvin) I get the error message Error in library(melvin) : There is no package called `melvin' but if I invoke >
2023 Aug 22
2
Is r2u at 3.4.1? [branch about handling package collisions under Ubuntu/Debian]
This is definitely tangential to the list: I'm on Ubuntu (22.04.2 LTS) not Debian and I'm sure this is about issues in the Ubuntu package management on my machine, R is only revealing them. The original subject line came from me wondering if my going over to the r2u repository would solve the problem.? However, as I think Dirk said, that's only really likely to be answered by trying