similar to: Placing axes label strings closer to the graph?

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 3000 matches similar to: "Placing axes label strings closer to the graph?"

2008 Mar 17
4
How does one do simple string concatenation?
How does one convert objects c("a","b","c") and "d" into "abcd"? > paste(c("a","b","c"), "d") of course yields [1] "a d" "b d" "c d" -- Ajay Shah http://www.mayin.org/ajayshah ajayshah at mayin.org
2008 Mar 18
3
Puzzled at generating combinations
I have two data frames. Suppose the first has rows r1 r2 r3 and the second has rows R1 R2 R3 I'd like to generate the data frame: r1 R1 r1 R2 r1 R3 r2 R1 r2 R2 r2 R3 r3 R1 r3 R2 r3 R3 How would I go about doing this? I'm sure there's a clean way to do it but I find myself thinking in loops. -- Ajay Shah
2004 Mar 01
6
Find out the day of week for a chron object?
I know that this is correct: library(chron) x = dates("01-03-04", format="d-m-y", out.format="day mon year") print(x) It gives me the string "01 Mar 2004" which is correct. I also know that I can say: print(day.of.week(3,1,2004)) in which case he says 1, for today is monday. My question is: How do I combine these two!? :-) I have a
2006 Mar 06
3
Interleaving elements of two vectors?
Suppose one has x <- c(1, 2, 7, 9, 14) y <- c(71, 72, 77) How would one write an R function which alternates between elements of one vector and the next? In other words, one wants z <- c(x[1], y[1], x[2], y[2], x[3], y[3], x[4], y[4], x[5], y[5]) I couldn't think of a clever and general way to write this. I am aware of gdata::interleave() but it deals
2008 Mar 07
4
Reading microsoft .xls format and openoffice OpenDocument files
1. I have used gdata::read.xls() with much happiness. But every now and then it breaks. I have not, as yet, been able to construct a mental model about the class of .xls files for which it works. Does someone have a simple rule for predicting the circumstances under which it will work? 2. Just like there is a read.xls(), it'd be great if we have a read.ods() which directly
2006 Jan 26
2
Prediction when using orthogonal polynomials in regression
Folks, I'm doing fine with using orthogonal polynomials in a regression context: # We will deal with noisy data from the d.g.p. y = sin(x) + e x <- seq(0, 3.141592654, length.out=20) y <- sin(x) + 0.1*rnorm(10) d <- lm(y ~ poly(x, 4)) plot(x, y, type="l"); lines(x, d$fitted.values, col="blue") # Fits great! all.equal(as.numeric(d$coefficients[1] + m
2004 May 27
3
Date parsing question
How do I parse a date "yyyymmdd"? I tried asking chron(s, "ymd") but that didn't work. Would the date parsing routines of the Date class of 1.9 grok this? -- Ajay Shah Consultant ajayshah at mayin.org Department of Economic Affairs http://www.mayin.org/ajayshah Ministry of Finance, New Delhi
2008 Oct 15
2
"Heuristic optimisation"?
I wondered was people on this list felt about this article: http://www.voxeu.org/index.php?q=node/2363 which talks about the problems of obtaining sound answers in numerical optimisation in settings such as MLE or NLS. -- Ajay Shah http://www.mayin.org/ajayshah ajayshah at mayin.org http://ajayshahblog.blogspot.com <*(:-? -
2004 Jun 21
2
Elementary sapply question
I am discovering sapply! :-) Could you please help me with a very elementary question? Here is what I know. The following two programs generate the same answer. --------------------------------+---------------------------------------- Loops version | sapply version --------------------------------+----------------------------------------
2006 Jan 22
6
Making a markov transition matrix
Folks, I am holding a dataset where firms are observed for a fixed (and small) set of years. The data is in "long" format - one record for one firm for one point in time. A state variable is observed (a factor). I wish to make a markov transition matrix about the time-series evolution of that state variable. The code below does this. But it's hardcoded to the specific years that I
2004 Jul 05
2
More difficulties in getting data into R
In order to get around the problems of my posting a few minutes ago, I thought: $ awk -F\| '(NR > 2) {print $2}' cmie_firm_data.text > col2 $ awk -F\| '(NR > 2) {print $4}' cmie_firm_data.text > col4 $ paste col2 col4 | head -2 -510.45 -510.27 60700 101900 $ paste col2 col4 | tail -2 28648.12 31617.02 491014.77 494308.52 $ wc -l col2 col4 89323 col2
2008 Mar 05
1
New data source - now how do we build an R interface?
Folks, A nice new data resource has come up -- http://data.un.org/ I thought it would be wonderful to setup an R function like tseries::get.hist.quote() which would be able to pull in some or all of this data. I walked around a bit of it and I'm not able to map the resources to predictable URLs which can then be wget. There's some javascript going on that I'm not understanding.
2009 Oct 17
2
How do I access with the name of a (passed) function
How would I do something like this: f <- function(x, g) { s <- as.character(g) # THIS DOES NOT WORK sprintf("The %s of x is %.0f\n", s, g(x)) } f(c(2,3,4), "median") f(c(2,3,4), "mean") and get the results "The median of x is 3" "The mean of x is 3" -- Ajay Shah
2005 Aug 19
1
Problem with get.hist.quote() in tseries
When using get.hist.quote(), I find the dates are broken. This is with R 2.1.1 on Mac OS X `panther'. > library(tseries) Loading required package: quadprog 'tseries' version: 0.9-27 'tseries' is a package for time series analysis and computational finance. See 'library(help="tseries")' for details. > x <-
2005 May 08
2
Need a factor level even though there are no observations
I'm in this situation: factorlabels <- c("School", "College", "Beyond") with data for 8 families: education.man <- c(1,2,1,2,1,2,1,2) # Note : no "3" values education.wife <- c(1,2,3,1,2,3,1,2) # 1,2,3 are all present. My goal is to create this table: School College Beyond
2009 Mar 15
1
cbind(NULL,zoo.object)?
Folks, I often build up R objects starting from NULL and then repeatedly using rbind() or cbind(). This yields code like: a <- NULL for () { onerow <- craft one more row a <- rbind(a, onerow) } This works because rbind() and cbind() are forgiving when presented with a NULL arg: they act like nothing happened, and you get all.equal(x,rbind(NULL,x)) or all.equal(x,cbind(NULL,x)).
2009 May 14
2
How to do a pretty panel plot?
The pretty picture that I saw at: http://chartsgraphs.wordpress.com/2009/02/09/r-panel-chart-beats-excel-chart/#more-1096 inspired me to try something similar. The code that I wrote is: ------snipsnip--------------------------------------------------------------------- M <- structure(list(date = structure(c(13634, 13665, 13695, 13726, 13757, 13787, 13818, 13848, 13879, 13910, 13939, 13970,
2004 Mar 02
2
Stuck in trying to convert repetitive code into a function
Folks, I have the following repetitive code which works correctly: A = read.table(file="junior.csv", sep=",", col.names=c("date", "l")); A$date = chron(as.character(A$date), format="m/d/y"); r.junior = levels2weeklyret(lastfriday, A$date, A$l); plot(A$date, A$l, type="l", col="red", main="Junior levels")
2004 Mar 03
5
get.hist.quote - is great, but am I missing something?
I find it's just great to be able to say: library(tseries) x <- get.hist.quote(instrument="ongc.ns") and it gets a full time-series of the stock price of the symbol ongc.ns from Yahoo quote. However, once my hopes have been raised by such beauty :-) I get disappointed when I do > plot(x) and the annotation is horrible! The x axis is not labelled as dates. The default
2004 Apr 21
2
Question on CAR appendix on NLS
The PDF file on the web, which is an appendix on nonlinear regression associated with the CAR book, is very nice. When I ran through the code presented there, I found something odd. The code does a certain model in 3 ways: Vanilla NLS (using numerical differentation), Analytical derivatives (where the user supplies the derivatives) and analytical derivatives (using automatic differentiation). The