Nice! That's perfect!
Thanks very much!
Sincerely,
Erin
On Thu, Nov 24, 2016 at 11:27 PM, Gabor Grothendieck <
ggrothendi...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Recessions are typically shown by shading. The zoo package has
> xblocks for this purpose. If app1 is your zoo object then:
>
> plot(app1)
> tt <-
> On Nov 24, 2016, at 8:50 PM, Val wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> I am trying to get shell variable(s) into my R script in Linux . How
> do I get them?
>
> my shell script is
> t1.sh
> #!bin/bash
> Name=Alex; export Name
> Age=25; export Age
>
>
> How do get the Name and Age variables i
Recessions are typically shown by shading. The zoo package has
xblocks for this purpose. If app1 is your zoo object then:
plot(app1)
tt <- time(app1)
xblocks(tt, tt >= "1990-07-01" & tt <= "1991-03-31",
col = rgb(0.7, 0.7, 0.7, 0.5)) # transparent grey
See ?xblocks for more info.
On Thu,
?commandArgs
--
Sent from my phone. Please excuse my brevity.
On November 24, 2016 8:50:29 PM PST, Val wrote:
>Hi all,
>
>I am trying to get shell variable(s) into my R script in Linux . How
>do I get them?
>
>my shell script is
>t1.sh
> #!bin/bash
> Name=Alex; export Name
> Age=25;
Hi all,
I am trying to get shell variable(s) into my R script in Linux . How
do I get them?
my shell script is
t1.sh
#!bin/bash
Name=Alex; export Name
Age=25; export Age
How do get the Name and Age variables in my R script?
My R script is
test.R
print " Your Name is $Name and
Awesome
Thanks!
Sincerely,
Erin
On Thu, Nov 24, 2016 at 10:14 PM, David Winsemius
wrote:
>
> > On Nov 24, 2016, at 7:03 PM, Erin Hodgess
> wrote:
> >
> > Hello! Happy Thanksgiving to those who are celebrating.
> >
> > I have a zoo series that I am plotting, and I would like to have s
> On Nov 24, 2016, at 7:03 PM, Erin Hodgess wrote:
>
> Hello! Happy Thanksgiving to those who are celebrating.
>
> I have a zoo series that I am plotting, and I would like to have some
> vertical lines at certain points, to indicate US business cycles. Here is
> an example:
>
library(tserie
Hi Erin,
I would look at:
par("usr")
to see what the range of the abscissa might be.
Jim
On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 2:03 PM, Erin Hodgess wrote:
> Hello! Happy Thanksgiving to those who are celebrating.
>
> I have a zoo series that I am plotting, and I would like to have some
> vertical lines a
Hello! Happy Thanksgiving to those who are celebrating.
I have a zoo series that I am plotting, and I would like to have some
vertical lines at certain points, to indicate US business cycles. Here is
an example:
app1 <- get.hist.quote(instrument="appl",
start="1985-01-01",end="2016-08-31", quot
Dears,
I'm trying to create an Data Editor like Rgui.exe's FIX (windows)...
The code is below.
The problem is that I can not get the binds to trigger the validation
commands and the main table command
Control-C, Control-V, and Control-X work only in the visual without my R
data being changed.
> On Nov 24, 2016, at 8:34 AM, CG Pettersson
> wrote:
>
> Dear all,
> I am working with PLS-regression using plsr() from the pls package. I have a
> medium sized dataset with 223 rows, ten reference columns and 192 columns
> with measurement data from an "electronic nose".
>
> There is a con
If I was to make a totally wild leap, I would say it looks like someone using
an inappropriate text editor such as Microsoft Word to edit R code.
Stuti, please carefully read and follow the recommendations in the Posting
Guide mentioned at the bottom of this and every post on this mailing list
`Hi Stuti,
Your problem is that if you want to have more than one command on a
single line, you must separate them with a semicolon.
j <- function() {
if(!exists ("a")){
a <- 1
} else{
a <- a+1
}; print(a)}
The above will work, but is usually considered bad form. What follows
is usually easie
Hello,
I don't see the error you mention.
j <- function() {
if(!exists ("a")){
a <- 1
} else{
a <- a+1
}
print(a)
}
j()
[1] 1
sessionInfo()
R version 3.3.2 (2016-10-31)
Platform: x86_64-w64-mingw32/x64 (64-bit)
Running under: Wi
Dear all,
I am working with PLS-regression using plsr() from the pls package. I have a
medium sized dataset with 223 rows, ten reference columns and 192 columns with
measurement data from an "electronic nose".
There is a convenient way of inspecting what you have done in the calls to
plsr() by
> j <- function() {
+ if(!exists ("a")){
+ a <- 1
+ } else{
+ a <- a+1
+ } print(a)}
Error: unexpected symbol in:
"a <- a+1
} print"
> j <- function() {
+ if(!exists ("a")){
+ a <- 1
+ } else{
+ a <- a+1
+ } print("a")}
Error: unexpected symbol in:
"a <- a+1
} print"
[[alternative HTML
As I understand it, you or I could write a package and if the automated
testing designed to ferret out basic R language compatibility and operating
system independence passes (and the maintainer accepts responsibility for it
and releases the code as open source), then it will usually be accepte
I don't have a solution to this problem, but as I have also struggled
with what I think is the same problem, I tried to find a small
reproducible example.
The problem seems indeed to be with the progress bar, which will clear
the console after x iterations when the progress bar is called in a
f
Hi all,
we are connecting to R language from Java using Rserve().
while doing so,Got one issue at hand
Some of the command in R is taking more than 20 min. During this time we
are receiving
java.net.SocketException: Connection reset
at java.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.j
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