Statistics questions tend to end up on http://stats.stackexchange.com/, so you could try that, too. It's a well-informed community.
Jack Henahan jhena...@uvm.edu == Computer science is no more about computers than astronomy is about telescopes…. -- Michael R. Fellows and Ian Parberry ==
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On Aug 30, 2011, at 2:04 PM, Andrew Coppin wrote: > On 29/08/2011 01:13 PM, Christopher Done wrote: >> There's also #math on freenode, but it's a scary wilderness. >> >> On 29 August 2011 13:34, Benedict Eastaugh<ionf...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> On 29 August 2011 09:34, Andrew Coppin<andrewcop...@btinternet.com> wrote: >>>> This is fairly wildly off-topic but... does anybody know of a good forum >>>> where I can ask questions about mathematics and get authoritative answers? >>> >>> Apart from math.stackexchange.com and mathoverflow.net, which people >>> have already mentioned, people often discuss mathematics on >>> #haskell-blah on Freenode. > > I know of several places where I can ask maths questions and half a dozen > people will take guesses at what the correct solution might be. I haven't yet > found anywhere where I can say "when would a chi-squared test be more > appropriate than a KS test?" and get an informed, knowledgeable answer. > (Answers from people who /know/ what they're talking about rather than just > /think/ they know.) > > Anyway, from this thread I've got the names of a few places to start looking. > And that's really what I was hoping for. Thanks for the tips. > > _______________________________________________ > Haskell-Cafe mailing list > Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org > http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe
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