Hi Simon, Thanks so much for your help. Your advice has been taken to heart. I now pass in blocks of 100,000 records, and it does 100,000 predictions in seconds and returns a logical vector with the predictions to an int array. It works like a charm!
I want to reference what we were talking about earlier. Let’s say we evaluate an R expression. Is there a way to just print, verbatim, what R evaluates to the screen (ie just a pure ASCII dump with no regard to the data type)? (I’m using Windows XP SP2, 2 x 1.8Ghz Xeon, 1GB RAM, Eclipse 3.1.1, JRI 0.2, R 2.2.1, jdk1.5.0_07, jre1.5.0_06) You mentioned earlier doing something as follows: rexp=reng.eval("nucleitrain"); System.out.println("nucleitrain="+rexp); long[] l=reng.rniGetVector(rexp.xp); for (int i=0;i<l.length;i++) System.out.println(new REXP(reng, l[i])); Now, Java outputs to the screen this: nucleitrain=RXP[unknown/19, id=1218430184, o=null] RXP[unknown/19, id=1218430408, o=null] RXP[int[], id=1219416784, [EMAIL PROTECTED] RXP[unknown/6, id=1204356856, o=null] RXP[unknown/6, id=1204325140, o=null] RXP[int[], id=1203946856, [EMAIL PROTECTED] RXP[double[], id=1210952032, [EMAIL PROTECTED] Which means I have to anticipate each expression type and properly handle it. If one does not know, a priori, what these expressions are, how can one do it? Ideally, I’m looking for something like the following: REXP rexp=reng.eval(“ . . . . “); rexp.DisplayToScreenAsRGuiDisplays(); I know this function exists because you wrote a Java interface to R. If it does, it would be an awesome thing to put on an examples page. Thanks, Adam -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/ASCII-dump-from-an-REXP-%28JRI%29-tf1964220.html#a5390018 Sent from the R devel forum at Nabble.com. ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel