Full_Name: Dr. Alex Sheppard
Version: 2.7.1
OS: Linux Debian Lenny
Submission from: (NULL) (79.73.224.62)
After scanning from an open (text) connection, then seeking, then scanning
again, the second scan returns incorrect result. It looks like the first byte
scanned was from the pre-seek file pos
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I am pretty sure that the results of Likelihood ratio test are bigger
than the real value. They are multiplied for the factor Ln(10), in this
way the p-values are smaller than what they should be.
The reason is that you apply the formula -2*log(exp(L(0)/exp(L(B)) a
On 8/28/2008 3:25 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Full_Name: R User
Version: 2.7.2 (default binary)
OS: Windows XP SP2
Submission from: (NULL) (83.25.29.163)
Hello!
I have conducted following experiment running simple R script:
for (i in 1:1) {
a<-0
for (j in 1:1000)
a<-c(a,j)
}
I just want to re-post this thread in case it slipped through the
"summer sieve" of someone that might be interested and/or has a real
solution beyond my serialize2() patch.
Cheers
Henrik
On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 8:10 PM, Henrik Bengtsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> FYI, I just notice th
On Fri, 2008-08-29 at 20:04 +0200, Peter Dalgaard wrote:
> OK, committed. Not the easiest hole to exploit, I'd say (notice that
> we
> only compile something, not execute it).
>
>
> .
>
> Oh, sh*! This is not portable! Needs code like INSTALL. Will refix.
Sorry about that. I forgot that pe
On Wed, Aug 27, 2008 at 06:54:27AM -0400, Duncan Murdoch wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> R version 2.7.2 for Windows fails to install local (zipped) packages
>> with following messages:
>>
>>
>>> utils:::menuInstallLocal()
>>>
>> updating HTML package descriptions
>> Error in .readRDS(
Hi,
I am pretty sure that the results of Likelihood ratio test are bigger
than the real value. They are multiplied for the factor Ln(10), in this
way the p-values are smaller than what they should be.
The reason is that you apply the formula -2*log(exp(L(0)/exp(L(B)) and
not what it should be
On Wed, Aug 27, 2008 at 06:54:27AM -0400, Duncan Murdoch wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> R version 2.7.2 for Windows fails to install local (zipped) packages
>> with following messages:
>>
>>
>>> utils:::menuInstallLocal()
>>>
>> updating HTML package descriptions
>> Error in .readRDS(
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Full_Name: Tom Callaway
Version: 2.7.2
OS: Fedora 10 (Linux/x86_64)
Submission from: (NULL) (96.233.67.230)
Recently, Debian identified a security issue with the javareconf script in R. I
confirmed that this is still unfixed in R 2.7.2.
The following patch resolves the
On 29 August 2008 at 17:35, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
| Full_Name: Tom Callaway
| Version: 2.7.2
| OS: Fedora 10 (Linux/x86_64)
| Submission from: (NULL) (96.233.67.230)
|
|
| Recently, Debian identified a security issue with the javareconf script in R.
Yes, somewhat launched a massive list of
After reading over the relevant sections of the manual more carefully,
I now see where the information is presented and I was able to get R
to compile with an alternate version of gcc. On thing, however,
remains unclear to me. If R is compiled with a non-default version of
a compiler, are subsequen
Full_Name: Tom Callaway
Version: 2.7.2
OS: Fedora 10 (Linux/x86_64)
Submission from: (NULL) (96.233.67.230)
Recently, Debian identified a security issue with the javareconf script in R. I
confirmed that this is still unfixed in R 2.7.2.
The following patch resolves the issue:
diff -up R-2.7.2/s
If you want to use this pattern repeatedly you can define something like
makeFunWithCounter <- function(fun) {
counter <- 0
list(count = function() counter,
fun = function(...) { counter <<- counter + 1; fun(...)})
}
and then do
> fwc <- makeFunWithCount
> "TH" == Ted Harding <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> on Fri, 29 Aug 2008 14:21:05 +0100 (BST) writes:
TH> On 29-Aug-08 13:00:01, Martin Maechler wrote:
>>> "cd" == christophe dutang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>> on Fri, 29 Aug 2008 14:28:42 +0200 writes:
>>
cd> Yes, I do
On 29-Aug-08 13:00:01, Martin Maechler wrote:
>> "cd" == christophe dutang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> on Fri, 29 Aug 2008 14:28:42 +0200 writes:
>
> cd> Yes, I do not cast the first argument as a matrix with
> cd> as.matrix function.
> cd> Maybe we could detail the error message if the fir
Thanks,
I think I over-emphasized the secondary function, but I can generate the
scoping problem as follows. First, at the command line, I can get a
function to access objects that were not in its arguments by
ProfileEnv = new.env()
hello.world = "Hello World"
assign('hello.world',hello.worl
> "cd" == christophe dutang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> on Fri, 29 Aug 2008 14:28:42 +0200 writes:
cd> Yes, I do not cast the first argument as a matrix with as.matrix
function.
cd> Maybe we could detail the error message if the first argument is a
numeric?
cd> error(_("'a' is
Yes, I do not cast the first argument as a matrix with as.matrix function.
Maybe we could detail the error message if the first argument is a numeric?
error(_("'a' is a numeric and must be coerced to a numeric matrix"));
Thanks for your answer
2008/8/29 Martin Maechler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >>
> "cd" == christophe dutang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> on Fri, 29 Aug 2008 12:44:18 +0200 writes:
cd> Hi,
cd> In function chol2inv with the option LINPACK set to false (default), it
cd> raises an error when the matrix is 1x1 matrix (i.e. just a real) saying
cd> 'a' must be
On 29/08/2008 6:52 AM, Giles Hooker wrote:
Thanks,
I think I over-emphasized the secondary function, but I can generate the
scoping problem as follows. First, at the command line, I can get a
function to access objects that were not in its arguments by
ProfileEnv = new.env()
hello.world = "H
Hi,
In function chol2inv with the option LINPACK set to false (default), it
raises an error when the matrix is 1x1 matrix (i.e. just a real) saying
'a' must be a numeric matrix
This error is raised by the underlying C function (modLa_chol2inv in
function Lapack.c). Everything is normal, but I wo
Matt Calder wrote:
Duncan,
Sorry to be, well, nit picking, but I can't get your example to run. I
am a longtime Splus user and am only using R on the side. The concept of
environments is one I have yet to grasp. I think the example you are trying
to provide will illuminate things for me,
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