>>>>> "JK" == John Kane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >>>>> on Thu, 19 Jun 2008 06:50:18 -0700 (PDT) writes:
JK> I was starting to write a note to a prospective R-user JK> and came to the point of explaining how to get useful JK> introductory information on R. After mentioning the JK> Into and the FAQs I went on to try to explain how to use JK> a lot of the contributed information. JK> However I realised that there seems to be no direct way JK> to get to Other Publications or Contributed JK> Documenation. JK> The best I have seen is to get to Books and then click JK> on "other publications" which take one to "Publications JK> related to R" or go to "other" (main page) and then JK> click on "Contributed Documentation" which takes one to JK> "Contributed Documentation" This seems less than optimal. that depends ... JK> Am I missing some more direct ways to get to JK> "Publications related to R" and "Contributed JK> Documentation"? I remember blundering around the site JK> for some time (days in elapsed time?) before I managed JK> to find these documents. JK> If I am not we may be losing a lot of potential users JK> who just cannot find basic documentation. The Intro and JK> the FAQs are invaluable Well, the first entry in the 'Documentation' section of the sidebar is 'Manuals' (which is considerably more than "The Intro and the FAQs"), and these are really the only documentation part which the R core team strives to keep up-to-date. Every R-project page reader should realize these are the official docs. If you open it, you already get a page with a link to contributed docs. Alternatively, there's the last item of the 'Documentation' section of the sidebar, called "Other" which does mention the "Contributed Doc.." section >>> on CRAN <<< Note that the R-project page (www.r-project.org) and CRAN are two "things", albeit closely related. CRAN is for "DOWNLOAD"ing, including free contributed docs. So that is the main reason, "contrib.docs" are not there in the www.r-project.org sidebar. JK> but not exactly the best way for a complete noivice to get started. Well, I actually would want the complete novice to take note that there is much official documentation, before (s)he delves into one of the contributed docs. Martin Maechler, ETH Zurich (and part of R-core) ______________________________________________ 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.