similar to: Calling the correct one of 2 conflicting functions

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 10000 matches similar to: "Calling the correct one of 2 conflicting functions"

2012 May 04
1
Absolute cumulative curve with ecdf/stepfun?
Hi, I have two variables ranging both from 0 to 1 (n=500 each). Now I am interested in plotting them both in one plot (using ggplot2). So far I used ecdf() (from an example I found with google) to get values for the cumulatice distribution function which gives a relative curve. I also want to do the same plot but using absolute cumulative values instead of relative. Can that be done with ecdf or
2002 Nov 25
1
Plotting continuous line types w/large datasets
Hi, R-Folks, I have 3 large datasets that I combined in a single plot with plot(ecdf(x1...),...) plot(ecdf(x2...),add=TRUE,...) plot(ecdf(x3...),add=TRUE,...) The datasets are very similar, so it is difficult to get visual separation among them. I tried many different line types without success -- the lines all came out solid. Checking further, plot.ecdf() calls plot.stepfun(), which calls
2003 Nov 17
4
cumulative distribution functions
hi y'all, I am wondering if there is any special command, function, package, etc to help me doing a cumulative distribution function, with y-scale - probability scale. I tried the help in R and i got the following answers: cumsum(base) Cumulative Sums, Products, and Extremes ecdf(stepfun) Empirical Cumulative Distribution Function cpgram(ts) Plot
2009 Sep 07
1
Plot 2 ecdf in one graph
Hi r-users,   I would like to compare the cdf between historical and predicted. My x.obs and x.pre are the frequency data in classes of 0-300. I tried: plot(ecdf(x.obs),ecdf(x.pre),type="l",col="red")   and it gives me: Error in plot.stepfun(x, ..., ylab = ylab, verticals = verticals, pch = pch) :   argument 4 matches multiple formal arguments   Thank you so much for any
2005 Nov 02
2
help with the coordinates of the ECDF object
Hi all R users I would like to know how acess the coordinates of the ECDF object. I look for the example, in this part: ###################### print(ls.Fn12 <- ls(env= environment(Fn12))) ###################### but I do not know to extract the Y coordinate and put it in other variable. My objective is to make a plot and identify the points with labels. ############# Example by
2007 May 30
1
Sort in ecdf
Hi! I've noticed the ecdf() R code (R ver. 2.5.0) contains two call to sort: --- [R-code] --- ecdf <- function(x) x <- sort(x) n <- length(x) if (n < 1) stop("'x' must have 1 or more non-missing values") vals <- sort(unique(x)) rval <- approxfun(vals, cumsum(tabulate(match(x, vals)))/n, method
2009 Jul 03
3
Color of ecdf plots
Hi. I have the following two ecdf plots in one graph: plot( ecdf(....), do.points=FALSE, verticals=TRUE, main=paste("Ecdf of distances ",DIM,sep=""), col="red" ); lines( ecdf(....), do.points=FALSE, verticals=TRUE ); How do I change the color of the resulting graph? Adding col="red" to either plot or lines results in an error
2008 Jul 15
1
methods/namespaces/possible bug
Using > methods("plot") [1] plot.Date* plot.HoltWinters* plot.POSIXct* [4] plot.POSIXlt* plot.TukeyHSD plot.acf* [7] plot.data.frame* plot.decomposed.ts* plot.default [10] plot.dendrogram* plot.density plot.ecdf [13] plot.factor* plot.formula* plot.hclust* [16] plot.histogram* plot.isoreg* plot.lm [19] plot.medpolish*
2006 Aug 25
2
plot question
Hi everyone, I have what may appear to be a newbie question, but I have looked everywhere I can think to look and I cannot find an answer. On page 35 of "An Introduction to R" the following command appears: plot(ecdf(eruptions), do.points=FALSE, verticals=TRUE). What is the do.points argument? I know what it does (suppresses printing of the points) but where can I find help on it?
2001 Oct 22
3
Two questions
Greetings, I have two questions that I could not answer from the documentation. A - ecdf and confidence intervals : Is there a (simple) way to generate confidence intervals (95%) for a ecdf? B - cross-validation of rpart trees : a colleague is using S to generate decision tree and mentioned to me the use of cross-validation. Is this function enabled in R ? if so, how should one proceed to
2008 Nov 08
2
lines, ecdf and colors
Hi. I'm trying to plot two ecdf's on the same graph using two different colors. I can plot using the same color, but it doesn't work when I change colors? Any suggestions? Thanks in advance for your help. x <- c(0.80, 0.83, 1.89, 1.04, 1.45, 1.38, 1.91, 1.64, 0.73, 1.46) y <- c(1.15, 0.88, 0.90, 0.74, 1.21) plot(ecdf(x)) # it works without col='blue', but doesn't
2002 Nov 01
2
Empirical distribution
If some can help to find under wich package can i find the commando's wich i schould to use to work with the empirical cummulative (ecdf) distribution and also the QQplot. Zmarrou Hicham Univesity of Amsterdam -.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.- r-help mailing list -- Read http://www.ci.tuwien.ac.at/~hornik/R/R-FAQ.html Send "info",
2011 Sep 24
2
two ecdf in the same figure
Hello, is ot possible to draw two ecdf of vectors (say s1 and s2) on the same figire with R. plot function draws a new plot and there is no function like points or lines to draw a second ecdf on the figure. Regards -- *PhD candidate in Computer Science Address 3 avenue lamine, cité ezzahra, Sousse 4000 Tunisia tel: +216 97 246 706 fax: +216 71 391 166* [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
2008 Aug 14
1
ecdf manipulation
I’m using the edcf function to look at a number of empirical distributions graphically for run-time analyses of stochastic optimization algorithms. When dealing with problems where the optimal solution for these problems is always found everything is fine and the graphs are very useful for comparative observations. These distributions have a vertical axis height of one i.e. a probability of one.
2006 Jun 04
2
slanted ends of horizontal lines for certain line widths
Hello, if I plot a horizontal line, e.g., plot(c(1,2),c(1,1),xlim=c(0,3),lwd=2,type="l") or plot(c(1,2),c(1,1),xlim=c(0,3),lwd=4,type="l") then the left end (1st example) or both ends (2nd example) of the lines are not rectangular but slanted on the graphical display (screen). That behavour first occurred when I was trying to plot a stepfun, e.g., y <-
2008 Mar 08
5
Non-visible functions are asterisked
Dear R-Helpers, I suspect I'm about to ask a FAQ, but I haven't been able to find an answer in the FAQ, AItR or an R Site Search. When I look at the methods of summary (below) it says, "Non-visible functions are asterisked". I looked at the help file for summary.princomp, which did not comment on it being non-visible. I ran its help file example, which printed visible output. I
2011 Oct 16
2
ecdf
Hi, Newbie here. I read the R for Beginners but i still don't get this. I have the following data (this is just an example) in a CSV file: courseid numstudents 101 209 141 13 246 140 263 8 321 10 361 10 364 28 365 25 366 23 367
2010 Apr 19
2
ecdf
Hello, I'd like to plot an empirical cumulative distribution function, except instead of the fraction of values < x, I'd like the fraction of values > x. I think this can be done using the ecdf function in {Hmisc}. I installed the package and loaded it. However, when following the example given in the documentation, I get an error: x <- rnorm(100) ecdf(x,what='1-F')
1997 Oct 29
2
R-alpha: Using autoload and smaller 'base' package [was "Re: New Version"].
[This is a "spill-over" from the "R-core" mailing list, since several of you may be interested and have comments ... -MM] >>>>> "Thomas" == Thomas Lumley <thomas@biostat.washington.edu> writes: Thomas> On 29 Oct 1997, Peter Dalgaard BSA wrote: >> Perhaps we should revise the current contents of the base library >>
2008 Jan 11
1
Adding weights to ecdf
I would like you consider that the function ecdf could be extended in the following way to handle weights when computing Empirical distribution Functions. There exist particular cases that supports this kind of extension, see for example: Rao, C. R., 1997. Statistic and True. Putting chance to work. World Scientific Publishing. Cox, D. R., 1969. Some Sampling Problems in Technology. New