Hi Thomas,
"Thomas S. Dye" wrote:
> On Dec 8, 2009, at 11:37 AM, Sébastien Vauban wrote:
>> "Thomas S. Dye" wrote:
>>> On Dec 7, 2009, at 11:50 PM, Sébastien Vauban wrote:
>>>
> [2] I guess one could potentially think about dealing with missing values
>more explicitly in org-babel. E.g
Hi Sebastien,
On Dec 8, 2009, at 11:37 AM, Sébastien Vauban wrote:
Hi Thomas,
"Thomas S. Dye" wrote:
On Dec 7, 2009, at 11:50 PM, Sébastien Vauban wrote:
[2] I guess one could potentially think about dealing with
missing values
more explicitly in org-babel. E.g. there could be a header
Hi Thomas,
"Thomas S. Dye" wrote:
> On Dec 7, 2009, at 11:50 PM, Sébastien Vauban wrote:
>
>>> [2] I guess one could potentially think about dealing with missing values
>>> more explicitly in org-babel. E.g. there could be a header arg
>>> specifying what values are to be treatyed as missi
Sébastien Vauban writes:
> Hi Dan and Eric,
>
> I have a side question, but I think this is of general interest for others as
> well.
>
> I almost don't know GnuPlot neither R -- yes, before seeing the light, I used
> Excel for all my graphs.
>
> So, my question is: for typical small plots (piech
Aloha Sebasien,
On Dec 7, 2009, at 11:50 PM, Sébastien Vauban wrote:
But what's a "NA" value in general? Is 0 always a meaningful value as
numeric? Context-sensitive..
NA is a logical constant of length 1 which contains a missing value
indicator. Whether or not 0 is a meaningful value a
Hi Dan and Eric,
I have a side question, but I think this is of general interest for others as
well.
I almost don't know GnuPlot neither R -- yes, before seeing the light, I used
Excel for all my graphs.
So, my question is: for typical small plots (piecharts and barplots), is there
any Org-babel
Hi Dan,
Dan Davison wrote:
> Sébastien Vauban writes:
>>
>> I have this table generated by a script:
>>
>> #+results: abc2008
>> | "2008/1" | -78.59 | 1627.24 |
>> | "2008/2" | -80.17 |700.33 |
>> | "2008/3" | -80.17 | 879.8 |
>> | "2008/4" | -80.17 | -25823.17 |
>> | "2008/5" | -8