Hi Thomas,

@Book{hastie.et.al:01,
author = {T. Hastie and R. Tibshirani and J. Friedman},
address = {New York},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
title = {The Elements of Statistical Learning: Data Mining, Inference and Prediction},
year = {2001}
}


might be helpful.

Best,
Dimitris

----
Dimitris Rizopoulos
Ph.D. Student
Biostatistical Centre
School of Public Health
Catholic University of Leuven

Address: Kapucijnenvoer 35, Leuven, Belgium
Tel: +32/16/396887
Fax: +32/16/337015
Web: http://www.med.kuleuven.ac.be/biostat/
    http://www.student.kuleuven.ac.be/~m0390867/dimitris.htm


----- Original Message ----- From: "Thomas Schönhoff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "R User-Liste" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 2004 9:34 AM
Subject: Re: [R] can't understand "R"



Hello,


Uwe Ligges schrieb:
Erin L. Leisz wrote:

If the manual "An Introduction to R is not sufficient for you, what about reading a book, e.g. Peter Dalgaard's "Introductory Statistics with R", Springer? Here you learn R along some basic statistical analyses.

BTW, can anybody recommend a book on "S/R and data mining"?


Thomas

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