Nice, Last year I found that my office needed some decoration and my wife has some fancy sewing machines that can be programmed to do embroidery and cross-stitch. So I designed some cross stitches (using R and the program for the machines) that show distribution functions and equations for the Central Limit Theorem, Bayes Theorem, and the Mean Value Theorem of Integration and my wife stitched them out for me. I certainly get varied comments when people see them.
Nice to know there are others who mix R, Statistics, and Textile crafts. On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 3:54 PM, Sarah Goslee <sarah.gos...@gmail.com> wrote: > I thought some of you might be amused by this. > > In my non-work time, I'm an avid weaver and teacher of weaving. I'm > working on a project involving creating many detailed weaving > patterns, so I wrote R code to automate it. > > Details here: > http://stringpage.com/blog/?p=822 > > If the overlap between R users and avid tablet weavers turns out to be >>> 1, I'll polish it up and turn it into a package. > > Sarah > > -- > Sarah Goslee > http://www.functionaldiversity.org > > ______________________________________________ > R-help@r-project.org mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help > PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. -- -- Gregory (Greg) L. Snow Ph.D. 538...@gmail.com ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.