> On Mar 27, 2017, at 7:15 AM, Paul Bernal wrote:
>
> Dear friends,
>
> Hope you are all doing great. I am trying to model historical data on
> transits, and the dates are in the following format: 1985-10-01
> 00:00:00.000 (this would be october, 1985).
> The data comes from an SQL Server Datab
Ok Jeff. Thanks.
Bert
On Mar 27, 2017 9:56 AM, "Jeff Newmiller" wrote:
> Actually, I think his question is about R because one answer that has been
> mentioned is to use the merge function, but I haven't felt the urge to
> create a reprex for him (see Posting Guide) and he keeps posting in HT
Actually, I think his question is about R because one answer that has been
mentioned is to use the merge function, but I haven't felt the urge to create a
reprex for him (see Posting Guide) and he keeps posting in HTML so it would
have been corrupted even if he had. Someone else also pointed out
A statistics, not really an R programming question, so I believe OT here.
But:
1. See the CRAN Time series task view for what's available:
https://cran.r-project.org/web/views/TimeSeries.html
2. stats.stackexchange.com is a good site for statistical questions.
Cheers,
Bert
Bert Gunter
"The t
Dear friends,
Hope you are all doing great. I am trying to model historical data on
transits, and the dates are in the following format: 1985-10-01
00:00:00.000 (this would be october, 1985).
The data comes from an SQL Server Database and there are several missing
observations. The problem is that
5 matches
Mail list logo