Re: [R] How to Export an R outcome to an Excel Spreadsheet

2012-05-03 Thread MacQueen, Don
The others have made suggestions for csv output.

For xlsx output go to CRAN, click on the packages link at the left, then
select packages listed by name. Then use your browser to search for the
string 'xls. There are several packages that offer this capability.

-Don

-- 
Don MacQueen

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
7000 East Ave., L-627
Livermore, CA 94550
925-423-1062





On 5/1/12 1:41 PM, Paul Bernal paulberna...@gmail.com wrote:

Hello R community,

I basically created a normal distribution with mean 2500 and standard
deviation = 450 with a sample of size 50 and assigned that to a variable
named genvar2 with the following command:

genvar2-rnorm(mean=2500, sd=450, n=50)

Now, the output of genvar2 generates de following:

[1] 2478.126 2671.259 2163.879 2440.796 2702.234 1871.514 2525.127
2830.688
 [9] 2704.148 3464.478 2609.795 3368.288 2661.613 2731.901 2535.846
2165.461
[17] 1870.069 3513.533 2053.342 2447.887 2605.913 2188.192 2514.004
2965.374
[25] 3550.454 1783.323 2568.323 2324.673 2528.994 2433.895 2751.111
2727.282
[33] 1837.081 1896.721 3445.993 1357.462 2348.177 2368.423 2029.738
2500.372
[41] 2000.008 3088.112 3003.325 2763.740 2475.636 1860.988 2292.909
2134.172
[49] 2291.116 2851.066
I want to export all of these numbers into a column in an excel file (in
an
xlsx and .csv format).

How can I do this?

Any help will be greatly appreciated,

Best regards,

Paul

   [[alternative HTML version deleted]]

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[R] How to Export an R outcome to an Excel Spreadsheet

2012-05-01 Thread Paul Bernal
Hello R community,

I basically created a normal distribution with mean 2500 and standard
deviation = 450 with a sample of size 50 and assigned that to a variable
named genvar2 with the following command:

genvar2-rnorm(mean=2500, sd=450, n=50)

Now, the output of genvar2 generates de following:

[1] 2478.126 2671.259 2163.879 2440.796 2702.234 1871.514 2525.127 2830.688
 [9] 2704.148 3464.478 2609.795 3368.288 2661.613 2731.901 2535.846 2165.461
[17] 1870.069 3513.533 2053.342 2447.887 2605.913 2188.192 2514.004 2965.374
[25] 3550.454 1783.323 2568.323 2324.673 2528.994 2433.895 2751.111 2727.282
[33] 1837.081 1896.721 3445.993 1357.462 2348.177 2368.423 2029.738 2500.372
[41] 2000.008 3088.112 3003.325 2763.740 2475.636 1860.988 2292.909 2134.172
[49] 2291.116 2851.066
I want to export all of these numbers into a column in an excel file (in an
xlsx and .csv format).

How can I do this?

Any help will be greatly appreciated,

Best regards,

Paul

[[alternative HTML version deleted]]

__
R-help@r-project.org mailing list
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.


Re: [R] How to Export an R outcome to an Excel Spreadsheet

2012-05-01 Thread Roy Mendelssohn
?write.table

Googling it would find the same thing

-Roy

On May 1, 2012, at 1:41 PM, Paul Bernal wrote:

 Hello R community,
 
 I basically created a normal distribution with mean 2500 and standard
 deviation = 450 with a sample of size 50 and assigned that to a variable
 named genvar2 with the following command:
 
 genvar2-rnorm(mean=2500, sd=450, n=50)
 
 Now, the output of genvar2 generates de following:
 
 [1] 2478.126 2671.259 2163.879 2440.796 2702.234 1871.514 2525.127 2830.688
 [9] 2704.148 3464.478 2609.795 3368.288 2661.613 2731.901 2535.846 2165.461
 [17] 1870.069 3513.533 2053.342 2447.887 2605.913 2188.192 2514.004 2965.374
 [25] 3550.454 1783.323 2568.323 2324.673 2528.994 2433.895 2751.111 2727.282
 [33] 1837.081 1896.721 3445.993 1357.462 2348.177 2368.423 2029.738 2500.372
 [41] 2000.008 3088.112 3003.325 2763.740 2475.636 1860.988 2292.909 2134.172
 [49] 2291.116 2851.066
 I want to export all of these numbers into a column in an excel file (in an
 xlsx and .csv format).
 
 How can I do this?
 
 Any help will be greatly appreciated,
 
 Best regards,
 
 Paul
 
   [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
 
 __
 R-help@r-project.org mailing list
 https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
 PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
 and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.

**
The contents of this message do not reflect any position of the U.S. 
Government or NOAA.
**
Roy Mendelssohn
Supervisory Operations Research Analyst
NOAA/NMFS
Environmental Research Division
Southwest Fisheries Science Center
1352 Lighthouse Avenue
Pacific Grove, CA 93950-2097

e-mail: roy.mendelss...@noaa.gov (Note new e-mail address)
voice: (831)-648-9029
fax: (831)-648-8440
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From those who have been given much, much will be expected 
the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice -MLK Jr.

__
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