On 01/16/2018 04:44 PM, Rupji, Manali wrote:
Hello,
I have recently developed a shiny R package to perform clustering analysis. It
is currently in publication and under review. I wish to also create a
bio-conductor package for the same. Does bio-conductor allow a shiny tool to be
created as
On 01/16/2018 10:37 AM, Leonardo Collado Torres wrote:
Hi,
I have been seen warnings in several of my packages on both release
and devel only in the Windows build machines in relation to missing
link files. Is this something that I can address from my side or a
more widespread issue? If it
Hello,
I have recently developed a shiny R package to perform clustering analysis. It
is currently in publication and under review. I wish to also create a
bio-conductor package for the same. Does bio-conductor allow a shiny tool to be
created as a bio-conductor package?
Any help in this
Hi,
Please keep following the instructions. You are on the right track.
The keys have been processed and you should be able to add your upstream now.
Best,
Nitesh
> On Jan 16, 2018, at 4:48 AM, Pau Bellot Pujalte wrote:
>
> Dear Bioconductor devel team,
>
> I'm Pau
Hi,
I think I remember it was once suggested on this list that DataFrame
objects with numeric columns could support math/summarization
operations, like data.frame objects do (can't find the thread
to provide the link, sorry).
I'll mention that wrapping a DataFrame object (or any matrix-like or
Hi,
I have been seen warnings in several of my packages on both release
and devel only in the Windows build machines in relation to missing
link files. Is this something that I can address from my side or a
more widespread issue? If it matters, I use roxygen2 for making my Rd
files.
Best,
Dear all,
There are duplicated commit in the Bioconductor commit history of the
qcmetrics package, which stop me from pushing additional changes. Here
is an illustration of the problem:
$ git clone g...@git.bioconductor.org:packages/qcmetrics.git
Cloning into 'qcmetrics'...
cd remote: Counting
Please be more specific about the desired operations, or, better, submt a
pull request with them. colMeans() in particular was intentionally omitted
because it depends on having homogeneous data, which is better suited for a
matrix, not a data frame.
On Mon, Jan 15, 2018 at 10:00 PM, Dario