Thanks for your kind respond. Although the answer didn't solve my question clearly,maybe I still not understand the art of R.
I'm sorry that I had not talked the problem clearly, maybe a example with more detail will be suitable as suggested in the the posting guide. In function fitting program, such as Sigmaplot, a fitting formula, can be write in separate form: G=a+(b*x)^(1/2) k=exp((G-G0)/(R*T)) fit k to y of course,in R's nls, can write as: mynls<-nls(formula=y~exp((a+(b*x)^(1/2)-G0)/(R*T)),data=mydata,...) In this example, the formula is simple and acceptable. However, when the formula is more complexity,writing all in one formula,the readability will be damaged.So I'm looking for a way to write simple and readable code in this situation. Spencer Graves wrote: > I'm not certain what you are asking. > > You can build expressions in R as character strings and then execute > them. Example: > > expr <- paste("two <-", 1, "+", 1) > eval(parse(text=expr)) > two > > If this does not answer your question, PLEASE do read the posting > guide, "www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html". It can help increase the > chances of a quick and useful reply. > > spencer graves > > Simple wrote: > > hi, > > I'm an newbie for R,I want do some fitting in R. > > > > I wander if it is possible to write a few of equations but only one > > formual when fitting > > > > Currently,My problem is,in R, is there methods combination a few > > equations into one formual? > > For example, > > y=f1(k); > > k=f2(t); > > t=f3(x); > > although it is certain that the can be equations turn into one formual as > > y~f(x),but write such a complexity string make me painful. > > > > I have searched the web and found out there were only examples with one > > formual.any suggestion? > > > > I hope that I have omit something.
______________________________________________ R-help@stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide! http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html