?multicore perhaps
On 09/14/2010 10:01 AM, Edwin Groot wrote:
Hello all,
I upgraded my R workstation, and to my dismay, only one core appears to
be used during intensive computation of a bioconductor function.
What I have now is two dual-core Xeon 5160 CPUs and 10 GB RAM. When I
fully load it,
You also may want to look at auto.arima in the 'forecast' package,
which will return the "best" ARIMA model based on AIC/AICc/BIC values
?auto.arima
hth
c
On 09/05/2010 06:02 PM, Stephan Kolassa wrote:
Hi,
basically, you know 5 periods later. If you use a good error measure,
that is.
I a
try help.start()
that starts a local help process (within R) and open your browser to
that local location.
-c
On 08/30/2010 03:53 PM, Bob McCall wrote:
Greetings:
I recently installed R 2.11.1 for windows. It seems that there is only
online help now. Is there any way to get the local docs?
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
At the bottom of the webpage.
-c
On 08/29/2010 03:58 AM, Kaigang Li wrote:
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
__
R-help@r-project.org mailing list
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-he
That worked. Stupid me forgot that I had the stock ticker 'F' assigned
in my workspace.
Well.. guess I'll hit myself with a 2x4 now.. Thanks for your help guys..
-c
On 07/28/2010 12:37 PM, Ben Bolker wrote:
Johnson, Cedrick W. cedrickjohnson.com> writes:
Howdy. Been
Howdy. Been running into a bit of trouble with plotting. Seems that
axes=F is not "working". Whenever I plot (either a dataframe or xts/zoo
series) and I set axes=F along with xlab/ylab="" I still get the default
axes printed in my chart. Consider this:
#Create some sample data, both 50 units
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