Hi:
Here's a simple example of its use using the data from Montgomery, Myers and
Vining (2002), problem 4.7:
ex4.7 <- structure(list(pressure = c(2500L, 2700L, 2900L, 3100L, 3300L,
3500L, 3700L, 3900L, 4100L, 4300L), nfast = c(50L, 70L, 100L,
60L, 40L, 85L, 90L, 50L, 80L, 65L), nfailures = c(10L,
Bob,
>> Does anybody know how to eliminate the double quotes so that I can use
>> the
>> variable name (generated with the paste function) further in the code...
?noquote should do it.
##
> "varName"
[1] "varName"
> noquote("varName")
[1] varName
Regards, Mark.
--
View this message in contex
combine() is meant to be used on randomForest objects that were built
from identical training data.
Andy
> -Original Message-
> From: r-help-boun...@r-project.org
> [mailto:r-help-boun...@r-project.org] On Behalf Of Dennis Duro
> Sent: Friday, December 10, 2010 11:59 PM
> To: r-help@r-pr
Craig O'Connell gmail.com> writes:
>I am currently modifying a previously developed predator prey model and
> was curious if there was a way to add in a disturbance to the model (let's
> say at time t=100). The disturbance can be the introduction of 40 prey
> (N=40) and 10 predators (Pred =
On 2010-12-11 16:47, Felix Andrews wrote:
On 12 December 2010 00:08, Peter Ehlers wrote:
[...snip...]
The idea is the same: you need to get your data
into "long" format with a grouping variable and
then use the 'groups' argument to xyplot.
Here's fake data frame (you should have provided one
On 12 December 2010 00:08, Peter Ehlers wrote:
> On 2010-12-11 03:12, Francesco Nutini wrote:
>>
>> mmmh, yes this method works...
>> but I have to overlap this two graphs:
>>
>>> xyplot(a ~b |sites, data=dataset, col="red")
>>
>>> xyplot(c ~b |sites, data=dataset, col="blue")
>>
>>
>> a, b and
Dear list,
Inspired by the original Knuth tools, and for paedaogical reasons, I wish
to produce a document presenting some source code with interspersed
comments in the source (see Knuth's books rendering TeX and metafont
sources to see what I mean).
I seemed to remember that a code chunk coul
Hi Tal,
I always think of factors as a way of imposing (however arbitrarily)
order on some variable. To that extent, the key aspect is first,
second, third, etc., represented numerically in factors as 1, 2, 3,
etc. . The labels are for convenience and interpretation. Consider:
x <- factor(c(5,
Hello dear R-help mailing list,
My question is *not* about how factors are implemented in R (which is, if I
understand correctly, that factors keeps numbers and assign levels to them).
My question *is* about why so many functions that work on factors don't
treat them as characters by default?
Her
try this:
> x
X1 X2
1 1 3
2 1 4
3 1 5
4 2 3
5 2 4
6 3 2
7 4 1
8 4 3
9 4 5
10 5 2
11 5 4
> sapply(split(x, x$X1), function(.grp){
+ paste(.grp[[1]][1], paste(.grp[[2]], collapse = ','))
+ })
1 2 3 4 5
"1 3,4,5" "2 3,4"
Hi Bob,
You can use the get() function to loopup a variable name.
> long.variable.name <- 5
> "long.variable.name"
[1] "long.variable.name"
> get("long.variable.name")
[1] 5
However, I think this is all overkill. Assuming
extractModelParameters() came from the MplusAutomation package, and
that
Dear R-users,
I am currently modifying a previously developed predator prey model and
was curious if there was a way to add in a disturbance to the model (let's
say at time t=100). The disturbance can be the introduction of 40 prey
(N=40) and 10 predators (Pred = 10). I would like to see my m
And not only that! According to the code, the only place that i is
set is in the loop for(i in 1:n){...}, and the test for 'break' is
if (i < 0.1) {break(i)}
Therefore the condition will never be satisfied.
Possibly Serdar meant
if(matris[i] < 0.1) {break}
or something similar.
Ted.
On 11-
If I understand correctly, the following should do it:
lag.max2 <- function(object, n = 12){
matris <- matrix(NA, nrow = n)
for(i in 1:n){
matris[i] <- ur.df(object, lags = i, type =
"trend")@testreg$coefficients[i+3,4]
if(matris[i]<0.1) break
}
# output
c('lag' = i, 'p' = matris[i])
}
a2 <
It is 'break', not 'break(I)'
Sent from my iPhone
What is the problem you are trying to solve?
On Dec 11, 2010, at 12:17, Serdar Akin wrote:
Hi
I'm trying to utilize the break command for breaking the loop when the
p-value is less than 10 per cent using the urca package. But it does
not
Hi,ALL
I want to use R in Perl, the Statistics::R module is great but I meet the
problem: I don`g know how to pass one array from Perl to R, can anyone show me?
Any suggestion will be appreciate~
Thank you!
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
__
Hello R folks,
I have three questions. I am trying to run a logistic regression (binomial
family) where the response variable is a proportion. According to R
Documentation in "a binomial GLM prior weights are used to give the number
of trials when the response is the proportion of successes." H
hi
thanks for your reply. there are around 2 nodes in my dataset. will it
work for conversion from edge list format to node list format? I am using R
under Windows XP.
With Warm Wishes and Regards
A. Abdul Rasheed, M.C.A., M.E., Ph.D.,
A
Hi
I'm trying to utilize the break command for breaking the loop when the
p-value is less than 10 per cent using the urca package. But it does not
break the loop, anyone that can help me?
library(urca)
set.seed(1)
a1 <- runif(100)
lag.max <- function(object, n = 12){
matris <- matrix(NA, nrow
Hi,
I'm generating the name of the variable with paste function and then using that
variable name further to get the specific position value from the data.frame,
here is the snippet from my code:
modelResults <- extractModelParameters("C:/PilotStudy/Mplus_Input/Test",
recursive=TRUE)
#extract
We would like to use the qrnn package for building a quantile linear ridge
regression.
To this end we need to use the function qrnn.rbf.
The meaning of the second argument x.basis, isn't clear to me.
What should I give it as an argument? Does the contents of this matrix have
any meaning or only it
On 11/12/2010 11:18 AM, Rainer Schuermann wrote:
On Saturday 11 December 2010 14:54:39 Duncan Murdoch wrote:
If you put a copy of Sweave.sty into your latex installation, in a few
months you'll have an obsolete version, and things will just not work.
A link from ly latex installation to the or
Is it a good idea to put Sweave.sty and other style files into CTAN as
a LaTeX package? (instead of pointing the users to file.path(R.home(),
'share', 'texmf') each time they run into troubles)
Regards,
Yihui
--
Yihui Xie
Phone: 515-294-2465 Web: http://yihui.name
Department of Statistics, Iowa S
Hello Anthony,
Since you are working on Windows, also consider using the "doSMP" with the
"foreach" package.
Although it is not fully GPL as many of us would have preferred (e.g: doSMP
is not on CRAN), it is still freely available (with source code and all) to
download (even without the need for "R
Santosh Srinivas wrote:
>
> I am trying to use RJSONIO
>
> I have:
> x <- c(0,4,8,9)
> y <- c(3,8,5,13)
> z <- cbind(x,y)
>
> Any idea how to convert z into the JSON format below?
>
> I want to get the following JSON output to put into a php file.
> [[0, 3], [4, 8], [8, 5], [9, 13]]
>
I ha
On 12/11/10 8:00 AM, Santosh Srinivas wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am trying to use RJSONIO
>
> I have:
> x <- c(0,4,8,9)
> y <- c(3,8,5,13)
> z <- cbind(x,y)
>
> Any idea how to convert z into the JSON format below?
>
> I want to get the following JSON output to put into a php file.
> [[0, 3], [4,
On Saturday 11 December 2010 14:54:39 Duncan Murdoch wrote:
> If you put a copy of Sweave.sty into your latex installation, in a few
> months you'll have an obsolete version, and things will just not work.
A link from ly latex installation to the original file in my R installation
would do fine?
Hello,
I am trying to use RJSONIO
I have:
x <- c(0,4,8,9)
y <- c(3,8,5,13)
z <- cbind(x,y)
Any idea how to convert z into the JSON format below?
I want to get the following JSON output to put into a php file.
[[0, 3], [4, 8], [8, 5], [9, 13]]
Thank you.
__
Hi R users.
I have a problem with function strata in sampling packages.
> st0 = strata(dom, stratanames="stratas", size=sample.size,
method="systematic",pik, FALSE)
Error in sort.list(y) : 'x' must be atomic for 'sort.list'
Have you called 'sort' on a list?
In previous version of R 2.9.1 and pre
Le 11/12/10 16:09, Santosh Srinivas a écrit :
Just wondering if there is a better way to do this?
x<- seq(4,20,1)
y<- sapply(x, function(x) (max(x-10,0)))
Is there a easier way to get to y? i.e. max(x-10,0)
Hello,
You are probably looking for pmax, that is described in the same help
page
Just wondering if there is a better way to do this?
x <- seq(4,20,1)
y <- sapply(x, function(x) (max(x-10,0)))
Is there a easier way to get to y? i.e. max(x-10,0)
__
R-help@r-project.org mailing list
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
PLEAS
Dear,ALL
I am using CRAN module Statistics::R to run R scripts in Perl, The problem
is how to pass the array variable to R?
Following is my Perl script:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use Statistics::R;
open DATA,"<","data.txt" or die "$!";
my @data = ;
my $R = Statistics::R -> new()
On 11/12/2010 8:41 AM, Rainer Schuermann wrote:
Why do you think it wasn't installed? There is no package "Sweave".
Sweave() is a function in package "utils", which you session info
indicates you have and is loaded.
Care to tell us what you want to do with Sweave and why you think it
isn't work
> Why do you think it wasn't installed? There is no package "Sweave".
>
> Sweave() is a function in package "utils", which you session info
> indicates you have and is loaded.
>
> Care to tell us what you want to do with Sweave and why you think it
> isn't working?
Oops - this is embarrassing!
Hello all,
I searched on the www but could not find installation instructution for
rapache on windows. The page says that the release runs on UNIX/Linux and
Mac OS X operating systems.
Has anyone been able to configure it on windows? Any idea how to go about
it?
Thank you.
__
On Sat, 2010-12-11 at 14:07 +0100, Rainer Schuermann wrote:
> Hi there!
>
> I tried to work with Sweave, assuming that it is part of the standard
> installation - which it was not for my system. Trying to install, it
> gives me this error message:
Why do you think it wasn't installed? There is no
Sweave is not a package. It is a function which comes with the base R.
Huang
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 9:07 PM, Rainer Schuermann <
rainer.schuerm...@gmx.net> wrote:
> Hi there!
>
> I tried to work with Sweave, assuming that it is part of the standard
> installation - which it was not for my syste
On 2010-12-11 03:12, Francesco Nutini wrote:
mmmh, yes this method works...
but I have to overlap this two graphs:
xyplot(a ~b |sites, data=dataset, col="red")
xyplot(c ~b |sites, data=dataset, col="blue")
a, b and c are columns in the same dataset. "Sites" is also a column in
the datas
Hi there!
I tried to work with Sweave, assuming that it is part of the standard
installation - which it was not for my system. Trying to install, it gives me
this error message:
> install.packages("Sweave")
Warning message:
In getDependencies(pkgs, dependencies, available, lib) :
package ‘Swe
Well, at least I could help (even if unintentionally), as a
compensation for all the help I got from the list.
Cheers.
Em sexta-feira, 10 de dezembro de 2010, Jim Lemon escreveu:
> On 12/10/2010 08:48 PM, Rodrigo Aluizio wrote:
>
> OK that's it. Working nicely. I sent the final graph with the not
Hi Mathijs,
this should work:
library(maptools)
library(ggplot2)
gpclibPermit()
theme_set(theme_bw())
#setwd("C:\\foo") point to your local dir
# Data: http://thematicmapping.org/downloads/world_borders.php
world.shp <- readShapeSpatial("TM_WORLD_BORDERS-0.3.shp")
# check for region-id - Use "
Hello Peter:
The new R install seems to have worked. Both doBy and coin appear to load and
run fine. Thanks for taking the time to help me.
Adam
From: Peter Ehlers
Cc: "r-help@r-project.org"
Sent: Fri, December 10, 2010 7:13:17 AM
Subject: Re: [R] New Inst
Hi:
Here's a plyr solution:
library(plyr)
dg <- data.frame(x1 = rep(1:2, c(10, 15)), x2 = 1:25)
f <- function(x) head(rev(sort(x)), 5)
> ddply(dg, 'x1', summarise, x2 = f(x2))
x1 x2
1 1 10
2 1 9
3 1 8
4 1 7
5 1 6
6 2 25
7 2 24
8 2 23
9 2 22
10 2 21
HTH,
Dennis
On Fri,
Hi:
On Fri, Dec 10, 2010 at 6:47 AM, Daniel Brewer wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am finding that the melt function from the reshape library causes
> errors when applied to a data.frame that contains numeric and character
> columns. For example,
>
In this case, thankfully so - it's warning that you're
mmmh, yes this method works...
but I have to overlap this two graphs:
> xyplot( a ~ b | sites, data=dataset, col="red")
> xyplot( c ~ b | sites, data=dataset, col="blue")
a, b and c are columns in the same dataset. "Sites" is also a column in the
dataset, but it's a factorial vari
Hi
r-help-boun...@r-project.org napsal dne 10.12.2010 15:00:12:
> Dear Mr Holtman Sir,
>
> Thanks a lot for your great solution. This certainly is helping me
achieve
> what I need to get. However, I shall be hugely thankful to you if you
can
> guide me in one respect.
>
> Sir, you have used
On 12/11/2010 02:25 AM, Simon Kiss wrote:
Dear colleagues,
i found a line or two of code in the help archives from Uwe Ligges about
creating slanted x-labels for a barplot and it works well for my purposes (code
below). However, I was hoping someone could explain to me precisely what the
code
Hi Michael,
Sorry if I'm being slow, but I've read your post three times and still
can't quite work out what you're trying to do (the changing variables
names are a bit confusing).
I use RSQLite a lot and might be able to help if you could explain
your inputs and desired output in simple terms.
Hello
On Fri, Dec 10, 2010 at 10:53 PM, casperyc wrote:
> I wonder if there is a way to print the R output with COLOR?
> Not the color plots, but the outputs in the console.
>
I once asked for this on the list [1], and the are two points:
- although technically feasible, say using ncurses, there
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