Displaying 20 results from an estimated 400 matches similar to: "12th Root of a Square (Transition) Matrix"
2017 Dec 20
2
outlining (highlighting) pixels in ggplot2
Using the small reproducible example below, I'd like to know if one can
somehow use the matrix "sig" (defined below) to add a black outline (with
lwd=2) to all pixels with a corresponding value of 1 in the matrix 'sig'?
So for example, in the ggplot2 plot below, the pixel located at [1,3] would
be outlined by a black square since the value at sig[1,3] == 1. This is my
first
2008 Jan 28
0
[LLVMdev] 2.2 Prerelease available for testing
Target: FreeBSD 7.0-RC1 on amd64.
autoconf says:
configure:2122: checking build system type
configure:2140: result: x86_64-unknown-freebsd7.0
[...]
configure:2721: gcc -v >&5
Using built-in specs.
Target: amd64-undermydesk-freebsd
Configured with: FreeBSD/amd64 system compiler
Thread model: posix
gcc version 4.2.1 20070719 [FreeBSD]
[...]
objdir != srcdir, for both llvm and gcc.
Release
2008 Jan 24
6
[LLVMdev] 2.2 Prerelease available for testing
LLVMers,
The 2.2 prerelease is now available for testing:
http://llvm.org/prereleases/2.2/
If anyone can help test this release, I ask that you do the following:
1) Build llvm and llvm-gcc (or use a binary). You may build release
(default) or debug. You may pick llvm-gcc-4.0, llvm-gcc-4.2, or both.
2) Run 'make check'.
3) In llvm-test, run 'make TEST=nightly report'.
4) When
2007 Sep 18
0
[LLVMdev] 2.1 Pre-Release Available (testers needed)
On Fri, Sep 14, 2007 at 11:42:18PM -0700, Tanya Lattner wrote:
> The 2.1 pre-release (version 1) is available for testing:
> http://llvm.org/prereleases/2.1/version1/
>
> [...]
>
> 2) Download llvm-2.1, llvm-test-2.1, and the llvm-gcc4.0 source.
> Compile everything. Run "make check" and the full llvm-test suite
> (make TEST=nightly report).
>
> Send
2008 Feb 03
0
[LLVMdev] 2.2 Prerelease available for testing
Target: FreeBSD 6.2-STABLE on i386
autoconf says:
configure:2122: checking build system type
configure:2140: result: i386-unknown-freebsd6.2
[...]
configure:2721: gcc -v >&5
Using built-in specs.
Configured with: FreeBSD/i386 system compiler
Thread model: posix
gcc version 3.4.6 [FreeBSD] 20060305
[...]
objdir != srcdir, for both llvm and gcc.
Release build.
llvm-gcc 4.2 from source.
2017 Dec 20
0
outlining (highlighting) pixels in ggplot2
Hi Eric,
you can use an annotate-layer, eg
ind<-which(sig>0,arr.ind = T)
ggplot(m1.melted, aes(x = Month, y = Site, fill = Concentration), autoscale
= FALSE, zmin = -1 * zmax1, zmax = zmax1) +
geom_tile() +
coord_equal() +
scale_fill_gradient2(low = "darkred",
mid = "white",
high = "darkblue",
2012 Nov 23
2
[LLVMdev] [cfe-dev] costing optimisations
On 23.11.2012, at 15:12, john skaller <skaller at users.sourceforge.net> wrote:
>
> On 23/11/2012, at 5:46 PM, Sean Silva wrote:
>
>> Adding LLVMdev, since this is intimately related to the optimization passes.
>>
>>> I think this is roughly because some function level optimisations are
>>> worse than O(N) in the number of instructions.
>>
2015 Feb 26
5
[LLVMdev] [RFC] AArch64: Should we disable GlobalMerge?
Hi all,
I've started looking at the GlobalMerge pass, enabled by default on
ARM and AArch64. I think we should reconsider that, at least for
AArch64.
As is, the pass just merges all globals together, in groups of 4KB
(AArch64, 128B on ARM).
At the time it was enabled, the general thinking was "it's almost
free, it doesn't affect performance much, we might as well use it".
2007 Sep 15
22
[LLVMdev] 2.1 Pre-Release Available (testers needed)
LLVMers,
The 2.1 pre-release (version 1) is available for testing:
http://llvm.org/prereleases/2.1/version1/
I'm looking for members of the LLVM community to test the 2.1
release. There are 2 ways you can help:
1) Download llvm-2.1, llvm-test-2.1, and the appropriate llvm-gcc4.0
binary. Run "make check" and the full llvm-test suite (make
TEST=nightly report).
2) Download
2009 Feb 08
0
Initial values of the parameters of a garch-Model
Dear all,
I'm using R 2.8.1 under Windows Vista on a dual core 2,4 GhZ with 4 GB
of RAM.
I'm trying to reproduce a result out of "Analysis of Financial Time
Series" by Ruey Tsay.
In R I'm using the fGarch library.
After fitting a ar(3)-garch(1,1)-model
> model<-garchFit(~arma(3,0)+garch(1,1), analyse)
I'm saving the results via
> result<-model
2012 Aug 22
1
Error in if (n > 0)
I've searched the Web with Google and do not find what might cause this
particular error from an invocation of cenboxplot:
cenboxplot(cu.t$quant, cu.t$ceneq1, cu.t$era, range=1.5, main='Total
Recoverable Copper', ylab='Concentration (mg/L)', xlab='Time Period')
Error in if (n > 0) (1L:n - a)/(n + 1 - 2 * a) else numeric() :
argument is of length zero
I do
2006 Jun 13
2
Garch Warning
Dear all R-users,
I wanted to fit a Garch(1,1) model to a dataset by:
>garch1 = garch(na.omit(dat))
But I got a warning message while executing, which is:
>Warning message:
>NaNs produced in: sqrt(pred$e)
The garch parameters that I got are:
> garch1
Call:
garch(x = na.omit(dat))
Coefficient(s):
a0 a1 b1
1.212e-04 1.001e+00 1.111e-14
Can any one
2011 Dec 01
1
[LLVMdev] [llvm-testresults] bwilson__llvm-gcc_PROD__i386 nightly tester results
Are these 225 compile time regressions real? It sure looks bad!
Ciao, Duncan.
On 01/12/11 09:39, llvm-testresults at cs.uiuc.edu wrote:
>
> bwilson__llvm-gcc_PROD__i386 nightly tester results
>
> URL http://llvm.org/perf/db_default/simple/nts/380/
> Nickname bwilson__llvm-gcc_PROD__i386:4
> Name curlew.apple.com
>
> Run ID Order Start Time End Time
> Current 380
2009 Sep 25
1
error while plotting
I am getting the following errors when I am trying to plot the data below. I cannot figure out the error.
Error in plot.window(...) : need finite 'xlim' values
In addition: Warning messages:
1: In min(x) : no non-missing arguments to min; returning Inf
2: In max(x) : no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
3: In min(x) : no non-missing arguments to min; returning Inf
4: In max(x) :
2008 Jun 19
1
PrettyR (describe)
#is there a way to get NA in the table of descriptive statistics instead of
the function stopping Thank you in advance
#data
x.f <- structure(list(Site = structure(c(9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L,
9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L, 9L,
9L, 9L, 9L, 9L), .Label = c("BC", "HC", "RM119", "RM148", "RM179",
"RM185",
2020 Aug 23
2
sum() vs cumsum() implicit type coercion
Hi
I noticed a small inconsistency when using sum() vs cumsum()
I have a char-based series
> tryjpy$long
[1] "0.0022" "-0.0002" "-0.0149" "-0.0023" "-0.0342" "-0.0245" "-0.0022"
[8] "0.0003" "-0.0001" "-0.0004" "-0.0036" "-0.001" "-0.0011"
2014 Aug 12
4
[LLVMdev] Explicit template instantiations in libc++
Most of libc++ doesn't have explicit template instantiations, which
leads to a pretty significant build time and code size cost when using
libc++, since a large number of common templates will be emitted by the
compiler and coalesced by the linker. Notably, in include/__config, we
have:
#ifndef _LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE
#define _LIBCPP_EXTERN_TEMPLATE(...)
#endif
whereas before
2020 Aug 25
1
sum() vs cumsum() implicit type coercion
>>>>> Tomas Kalibera
>>>>> on Tue, 25 Aug 2020 09:29:05 +0200 writes:
> On 8/23/20 5:02 PM, Rory Winston wrote:
>> Hi
>>
>> I noticed a small inconsistency when using sum() vs cumsum()
>>
>> I have a char-based series
>>
>> > tryjpy$long
>>
>> [1]
2005 Aug 26
2
chisq.,test`
Hi
I am trying to do this:
chisq.test(c(11, 13, 12, 18, 21, 43, 15, 12, 9, 10, 5, 28, 22, 11, 15,
11, 18, 28, 16, 8, 15, 19, 44, 18, 11, 23, 15, 23, 2, 5, 4, 14, 3, 22,
9, 0, 6, 19, 15, 32, 3, 16, 14, 10, 24, 16, 24, 31, 29, 28, 16, 26, 11,
11, 4, 17, 16, 13, 20, 26, 16, 19, 34, 19, 17, 14, 22, 25, 17, 12, 23,
14, 19, 30, 18, 10, 23, 21, 17, 16, 10, 14, 6, 17, 17, 10, 21, 25, 20,
4, 11, 4,
2012 Jun 20
2
[LLVMdev] Exception handling slowdown?
Did something change with exception handling recently? A bunch of lit bots are
showing slower compile times for many tests.
Ciao, Duncan.
On 20/06/12 07:53, llvm-testresults at cs.uiuc.edu wrote:
>
> lab-mini-03__O0-g__clang_DEV__x86_64 test results
> <http://llvm.org/perf/db_default/v4/nts/1283?compare_to=1278&baseline=999>
>
> Run Order Start Time Duration
>