similar to: simple data question

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 9000 matches similar to: "simple data question"

2009 Aug 13
3
split number in a vector and then make a chron object out of it
These are date and times in the format YYYYMMDDhhmmss. I would like to take this column and make a chron object form them. I have tried a couple of the split family of functions but they need character input here is the data: date.time <- c(19851001001500, 19851001003000, 19851001004500, 19851001010000, 19851001011500, 19851001013000, 19851001014500, 19851001020000, 19851001021500,
2009 Jan 15
3
Bar Plot ggplot2 Filling bars with cross hatching
#I am putting a test together for an introductory biology class and I would like to put different cross hatching inside of each bar for the bar plot below color <- c("Brightly Colored", "Dull", "Neither") lizards <- c(277, 70, 3) liz.col <- data.frame(color, lizards) qplot(color, lizards, data=liz.col, geom="bar", ylab="Observed Matings",
2008 Aug 15
3
ylab with an exponent
plot(1,2, ylab= paste("insects", expression(m^2), sep=" ")) I get insects m^2 I would like m to the 2 what is the problem? -- Let's not spend our time and resources thinking about things that are so little or so large that all they really do for us is puff us up and make us feel like gods. We are mammals, and have not exhausted the annoying little problems of being
2010 Feb 18
3
row indexes from logical statment
Is there any easy way to pull out the row indexes for a logical matching statment? #################example code######################################### foo <- data.frame(name=c(rep("A", 25), rep("B", 25), rep("C", 25), rep("A", 25)), stuff=rnorm(100), and=rnorm(100), things=rnorm(100)) #this is what I want but I would like the row indexes
2008 Dec 02
2
ggplot2 45deg axis labels
I would like to rotate the axis labels 45 deg. -- Stephen Sefick Let's not spend our time and resources thinking about things that are so little or so large that all they really do for us is puff us up and make us feel like gods. We are mammals, and have not exhausted the annoying little problems of being mammals. -K. Mullis
2009 Jul 15
2
ifultools on ppc debian
I have tried to compile this from source. I don't know what Endianess is, but it is probably not debian power pc. Am I would of luck with this package? Stephen Sefick * Installing *source* package ?ifultools? ... ** libs gcc -std=gnu99 -I/usr/local/lib/R/include -I"../inst/include/" -D"MUTIL_STATIC" -D"DEF_TF" -D"INTERRUPT_ENABLE"
2008 Jan 21
4
Stationarity of a Time Series
Does anyone know of a test for stationarity of a time series, or like all ordination techniques it is a qualitative assessment of a quantitative result. Books, papers, etc. suggestions welcome. thanks Stephen -- Let's not spend our time and resources thinking about things that are so little or so large that all they really do for us is puff us up and make us feel like gods. We are
2009 Nov 30
2
Ubuntu tcl/tk problems
Error in firstlib(which.lib.loc, package) : Tcl/Tk support is not available on this system Error : package 'tcltk' could not be loaded Ubuntu 9.10 I have both the 8.5 and 8.4 tcl and tk regular and dev libraries installed. I need both of these because some of my GIS software requires the 8.4 libraries. Should I remove the 8.5 libraries, or ... All help is greatly appreciated!
2008 Sep 20
1
fitting a hyperbole
I have got a data set that is Gross Primary Productivity ~ Total Suspended Solids it is a hyperbola just like: plot(1/c(1:1000)) how do I model this relationship so that I can get all of the neat things that lm gives residuals etc. etc. so that I can see if my eyeball model stands up. Thanks for any help, pointers, or good things to read. -- Stephen Sefick Research Scientist Southeastern
2008 Aug 28
1
abline of an lm fit not correct
mac osx 10.5.4 R 2.7.1 I have fit a model d<-lm(y~x) with an R^2 of 0.963 but when I issue the command abline(d) the line is below where it ought to be. Looks like the right slope, but not the right intercept. thanks -- Stephen Sefick Research Scientist Southeastern Natural Sciences Academy Let's not spend our time and resources thinking about things that are so little or so large
2008 Oct 23
1
Reversing xlim qplot
I would like to be able to reverse the xlim on qplot this is the code that I am using qplot(a[,"River.Mile"], a[,26] ,ylab=colnames(a)[26], xlab="RiverMile", xlim=rev(c(60, 216)))+geom_smooth()+scale_x_continuous(breaks=c(215,202,198,190,185,179,148,119,61),
2008 Oct 29
1
Macro stuff to work on up through august 2007
Title says it all remember cast() with sum as the aggregation function -- Stephen Sefick Research Scientist Southeastern Natural Sciences Academy Let's not spend our time and resources thinking about things that are so little or so large that all they really do for us is puff us up and make us feel like gods. We are mammals, and have not exhausted the annoying little problems of being
2009 Jul 23
1
read.csv greater than
I have a csv file that I am trying to read in and know that values <0 are erroneous - is there a way to read only value grater than 0. thanks, -- Stephen Sefick Let's not spend our time and resources thinking about things that are so little or so large that all they really do for us is puff us up and make us feel like gods. We are mammals, and have not exhausted the annoying little
2008 Aug 18
4
Multiple Plotting help (lines don't always connect)
d <- structure(c(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, NA, NA, NA, 14), .Dim = c(14L, 2L ), .Dimnames = list(NULL, c("a", "b"))) plot(d, type="b") This is simplified, but Is there an option I am missing that will force all of the points to be joined by a line? Stephen Sefick -- Let's not spend our time and resources
2008 Apr 08
3
simple graphing question
#copy and paste this into R f <- (structure(list(TKN = c(0.103011025, 0.018633208, 0.104235702, 0.074537363, 0.138286096), RM = c(215, 198, 148, 119, 61)), .Names = c("TKN", "RM"), class = "data.frame", row.names = 25:29)) plot(f$TKN~f$RM, type="b") I would like to reverse the X-Axis. How do I do this? -- Let's not spend our time and resources
2008 Nov 09
1
maptools sunrise sunset function
##This is a function that I am trying to write to calculate sunrise and sunset and works "mostly", but returns nonsensical values. What am I #missing? Thanks in advance. ###remember to include maptools as dependence### library(maptools) sunrise.set <- function(lat, long, date, timezone="UTC", num.days=1){ #this needs to be long lat# lat.long <- matrix(c(long, lat),
2008 Nov 04
2
Zoo seems to be running slow in R 2.8.0 windows
R version 2.8.0 (2008-10-20) i386-pc-mingw32 locale: LC_COLLATE=English_United States.1252;LC_CTYPE=English_United States.1252;LC_MONETARY=English_United States.1252;LC_NUMERIC=C;LC_TIME=English_United States.1252 attached base packages: [1] stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods base other attached packages: [1] StreamMetabolism_0.01 chron_2.3-24 zoo_1.5-4 loaded
2008 Jul 15
2
POSIXct extract time
RM215.sp <- SpatialPoints(RM215, proj4string=CRS("+proj=longlat +datum=WGS84")) d060101 <- as.POSIXct("2006-01-01", tz="EST") study_seq <- seq(from=d060101, length.out=761, by="days") up.215 <- sunriset(RM215.sp, study_seq, direction="sunrise", POSIXct.out=TRUE) down.215 <- sunriset(RM215.sp, study_seq, direction="sunset",
2008 Oct 22
1
plotting matrix
a <- c(1:26) b <- rnorm(25) e <- rnorm(25) f <- rnorm(25) g <- data.frame(b,e, a,f) I would like to plot a agianst all possibilities and then shoot it out to a pdf one graph per page. I think it would be okay to have this as a lattice plot or a ggplot with many graphs per page. I can figure all of that out I think, but I need something like r <- as.matrix(g) plot(.~a, data=r)
2009 Aug 21
5
splitting a string up
x <- "1041281__2009_08_20_.lev" I would like to split this string up and only extract the leading numbers. 1041281 to use as a label for a data column in a bigger for loop function to read in data. regards, -- Stephen Sefick Let's not spend our time and resources thinking about things that are so little or so large that all they really do for us is puff us up and make us