similar to: stem() bug?

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 7000 matches similar to: "stem() bug?"

2011 Jul 07
2
How do I overlay two trellis plots of lme fitted lines produced by plot.augPred?
Hello, I want to use lme to fit two (or more) models, and then compare the fits on each individual. I know how to write my own code to do this (for each individual, plot the raw data, followed by lines() to plot each fitted curve) but I would like to use plot(augPred(... as it produces a nice trellis plot. I thought I could do this with par(new=T) but it does not seem to work.
2006 Nov 13
1
"stem" does not give a correct answer (PR#9359)
Full_Name: Myung Geun Kim Version: 2.4.0 OS: Window XP Submission from: (NULL) (210.110.8.105) For the data c1 of size 14, stem provides the following result. ************************************************************** >c1 [1] 14 39 70 11 38 20 37 15 41 74 74 34 48 51 ZZangi>stem(c1) The decimal point is 1 digit(s) to the right of the | 0 | 145 2 | 04789 4 | 181 6 | 044
2003 Jul 16
2
Stem and leaf display?
I would like to do some fairly basic stem-and-leaf displays in R. I am aware (I might even say painfully aware) of stem(base) and have tried it. That's why I'm hoping someone has a usable stem- and-leaf display for R so that I don't have to write my own. r-project.org > Search > R Site Search > "stem and leaf display" finds nothing. I also tried the mail archive
2004 Mar 05
4
error? at stem() (PR#6645)
Full_Name: Yutaka Hamaoka Version: 1.8.1(Raqua) OS: OSX 10.3 Submission from: (NULL) (218.140.186.74) Hi, I've found "stem()" falls into infinit loop when x has no variance. Let's try x<-matrix(1,nrow=100,ncol=1) stem(x) Then you will get infinit flow. The decimal point is 9 digit(s) to the left of the | -214748360 | -214748358 | -214748356 | -214748354 |
2004 Jan 22
1
stem plot problem with the mtcars data (PR#6453)
Full_Name: Liming Liang Version: 1.8.1 OS: windows2000 professional Submission from: (NULL) (67.172.81.139) I was looking at the variable 'mpg' of the data file 'mtcars' and make a stem plot, the following is the commend I entered. The stem plot shows the largest observation is 32.9 but actually in the data the largest observation is 33.9, here might be a problem. >
2018 Feb 16
0
stem - strange leaves
Hi I do not know why does it happen but you can control the behaviour by setting scale to 0.5. Cheers Petr > -----Original Message----- > From: R-help [mailto:r-help-bounces at r-project.org] On Behalf Of Leif Ruckman > Sent: Friday, February 16, 2018 9:18 AM > To: r-help at r-project.org > Subject: [R] stem - strange leaves > > > x > [1] 8.0 7.9 7.5 7.0 8.0 7.3 8.0
2018 Feb 16
4
stem - strange leaves
> x [1] 8.0 7.9 7.5 7.0 8.0 7.3 8.0 7.2 7.4 7.3 7.8 8.0 7.7 8.3 7.8 7.8 7.1 7.7 6.9 7.5 7.5 7.3 7.2 7.5 7.2 > stem(x) The decimal point is at the | 6 | 9 7 | 012223334 7 | 5555778889 8 | 00003 > y <- c(x, 8) > stem(y) The decimal point is 1 digit(s) to the left of the | 68 | 0 70 | 00 72 | 000000 74 | 00000 76 | 00 78 | 0000 80 | 00000 82 | 0 The
2010 Apr 15
1
classes and functions for qqnorm and stem
Referring to "Using R for Data Analysis and Graphics" by J H Maindonald, and available from the R site, I found the example on p.30 non-working: > stem(qqnorm(possum$hdlngth)) Error in stem(qqnorm(possum$hdlngth)) : 'x' must be numeric Since qqnorm(possum$hdlngth) plots, and > class(possum$hdlngth) [1] "numeric" , the problem must be here: >
2001 Dec 28
1
Simple:: usage of stem() and hist()?
I must apologize in advance for asking a simple question. I am sure that a clue will be sufficient to get this show on the road. I am trying to graph tide prediction data in various ways. I haven't been able to answer this question after pouring over TFM. I read the datafile theight <- read.table("tides",header=TRUE) I do get a summary() or fivenum()
2008 Sep 12
1
Parallel stem-and-leaf displays
Hi there, I am trying to find a way to accomplish parallel stem-and-leaf displays in R, yet there seems to be no specific command nor info in the archive that I can depend on. Specifically, there are two batches of data that I want to put together in parallel stem-and-leaf displays. Would anyone help me figure out how to do this in R? Thank you sooooooooooooo much! Jin [[alternative HTML
2008 Jul 13
1
stem and leaf plot: how to edit the stem-values
Hi, I would like to make a stem and leaf plot and I want to edit the category-names. So, by doing this: > x <- c(1,2,2,3,3,3,3,2,2,1) > stem(x) I get: 1 | 00 1 | 2 | 0000 2 | 3 | 0000 First Question: Why do I get gaps between the categories? (like in line 2 and line 4) And second: How can I edit the categories so that I can create something like that:
2008 Aug 16
1
python how do i stem words in python?
hi, i am newbie to xapian and am trying to get started with it in python. there is no stemmer.stem_word method in the latest python library. how do i stem words before doing doc.add_posting? is there any sample hello world code in python that i can use? thanks a lot! >>> stemmer = xapian.Stem('english') >>> stemmer. stemmer.__call__
2006 Dec 06
10
Stem Analyzer
Hi all, I am trying to implement a search that will use the Stem Analyzer. I added the Stem Anaylzer from the examples shown in another post http://ruby-forum.com/topic/80178#147014 module Ferret::Analysis class StemmingAnalyzer def token_stream(field, text) StemFilter.new(StandardTokenizer.new(text)) end end end The problem with the Stem analyzer is that when I search for a
2011 Nov 04
1
Help: stemming and stem completion with package tm in R
Hi All I came across a problem below when doing stemming and stem completion with package tm in R. Word "mining" was stemmed to "mine" with stemDocument(), and then completed to "miners"with stemCompletion(). However, I prefer to keep "mining" intact. For stemCompletion(), the default type of completion is "prevalent", which takes the most
2018 Feb 16
1
Unnecessary lines in stem.c?
A discussion on r-help led me to look at stem.c at https://github.com/wch/r-source/blob/trunk/src/library/graphics/src/stem.c Lines 76-77 appear superfluous. They sit inside a condition, and set mu, as follows: if (k*(k-4)*(k-8) == 0) mu = 5; if ((k-1)*(k-5)*(k-6) == 0) mu = 20; But mu is set unconditionally to 10 on line 84, and that is followed by conditional assignments (on line 85-6)
2003 Feb 06
1
Réf. : About STEM Plot in R
hello, you can use the persp() function. The shade=0.7 option is very nice. With matlab, it is possible to change of colors automaticalli with the value to be plotted. Does someone know to do that ? Gr?gory f0z6305 at labs.tamu.edu@stat.math.ethz.ch on 06/02/2003 07:05:04 Envoy? par : r-help-admin at stat.math.ethz.ch Pour : r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch cc : Objet : [R] About
2006 Jun 03
0
Irregularity in stem() display (PR#8934)
Hi, R people. Consider the following small R session: ======================================================================> > a <- c(8.48, 9.58, 9.96) > stem(a) The decimal point is at the | 8 | 8 | 5 9 | 9 | 6 10 | 0 > stem(round(a,1)) The decimal point is at the | 8 | 5 9 | 9 | 6 10 | 0
2018 Feb 16
0
stem - strange leaves
Hi R is open source so you could dig into the code. However the actual stem function is probably written in C, so it is beyond my expertise. If you replied to the list there could be experts who are able to provide explanation. > stem function (x, scale = 1, width = 80, atom = 1e-08) { if (!is.numeric(x)) stop("'x' must be numeric") x <- x[is.finite(x)]
2006 Dec 06
1
AAF - Stem Analyzer
I''m not on AAF. Can someone else help Raymond with an example? On 12/6/06, Raymond O''connor <nappin713 at yahoo.com> wrote: > > Matt Schnitz wrote: > > You also need to stem-analyze the incoming query. > > > > I had this same problem. :^> > > > > > > Schnitz > > Do you have an example of how to do this? I''m using
2000 Jul 26
1
Bug in stem? (PR#617)
# Your mailer is set to "none" (default on Windows), # hence we cannot send the bug report directly from R. # Please copy the bug report (after finishing it) to # your favorite email program and send it to # # r-bugs@biostat.ku.dk # ###################################################### "b" <- c(-5.5, -4, -2.3, -1.5, -1, -0.5, -0.41, -0.33, -0.29, -0.26, -0.2,