You will only really learn R by reading and trying things yourself. As John says, there are many good books out there. Have you read the introductory material that comes with R in the help system? I would recommend you start the help system and scroll through the list of functions contained in the stats package. You will be amazed at what you find.

Kevin

On 02/14/2015 12:08 PM, John Kane wrote:
There are anumber of good papers and books in pdf format at the
R site.  Select a CRAN location and you should see an entry for them on the 
left side of the page. Pick a couple and see if they help.

And for a fun read on introductory statistics in general which should cover 
everything you wanted to know and more have a look at
Danial Navarro's downloadable stats book at 
http://health.adelaide.edu.au/psychology/ccs/teaching/lsr/

John Kane
Kingston ON Canada


-----Original Message-----
From: lis...@terpmail.umd.edu
Sent: Fri, 13 Feb 2015 12:17:10 -0500
To: r-help@r-project.org
Subject: [R] Use of R for Hypothesis Testing

Dear Staff
Hello,

I am recently trying to learn some functions of R. How would I use R to
do
T-test, confidence interval calculation, chi-square test and ANOVA?

--
Thank you
Sike Li (Lydia)

        [[alternative HTML version deleted]]



--
Kevin E. Thorpe
Head of Biostatistics,  Applied Health Research Centre (AHRC)
Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael's
Assistant Professor, Dalla Lana School of Public Health
University of Toronto
email: kevin.tho...@utoronto.ca  Tel: 416.864.5776  Fax: 416.864.3016

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