Displaying 5 results from an estimated 5 matches similar to: "Repost: Pluralization of non-noun names"
2006 May 12
2
Pluralization of non-noun names
People,
I have an insurance company client and for the last eleven years I have
wanted to completely redevelop their system from scratch. However, the
boss has never been interested in hiring a team to develop the new
system (partly because of the cost and partly because of some famous and
expensive development failures in the industry) and has always insisted
on incremental development of the
2004 May 04
1
RE: more on lm(y~x) question: removing NA´s
1. If your code actually runs, you should upgrade R, and quit using `_' for
assignment... 8-)
2. You seem to have an extraneous `]' after the na.exclude. Could that be
the problem?
Andy
> From: Christoph Scherber
>
> actually, the situation is much more complicated. I am producing
> multiple graphs within a "for" loop. For some strange reason, the
>
2007 Dec 19
1
noun-verb vs verb-noun aka dogs black vs black dogs
Wow. I wasn't expecting such a voluminous reply -- some I agree with and
some I don't.
My apologies for an equally voluminous reply.
On Wed, 19 Dec 2007, Tony Plack wrote:
> > We're not discussing code or the inner workings of Asterisk or even
> > changing the functionality of Asterisk, just what the proper order of
> > the words should be.
> >
> >
2012 Sep 19
7
Renaming Journey and avoiding libraries with common noun names
Hi all,
I know this is a long shot, but could renaming the "Journey" module please
be considered by those in a position to support it?
I''ve written an issue on this in the journey repo also:
https://github.com/rails/journey/issues/49
Essentially our project has a model named Journey, the same as Rails 3.2''s
new routing driver. As a consequence we can no longer
2008 Mar 27
2
Proper noun stemming
Hi All
I was wondering if anyone had a solution for the following problem.
I user QueryParser to stem my documents before adding them to a
database. During the stemming process I would like to find a way of
keeping proper nouns that span two or more words together as a phrase.
For example "New York" or "Gordon Brown" or "Prime Minister" get spilt
up. I see