Wow, you are quite confused! Have you gone through any basic R
tutorials (there are many good ones on the web), as it sure looks like
you have not and therefore have almost no idea how to use R. If that
is the case, it is unlikely that this list (or R!) is going to be much
use to you.
Anyway, appl
Thank you.
Regards
On Friday, November 11, 2016 6:44 PM, Jeff Newmiller
wrote:
The "apply" I am familiar with us a FUNCTION in base R, not a contributed
package. That is to say, it is always available in R, not something you need to
load.
--
Sent from my phone. Please excuse my brev
The "apply" I am familiar with us a FUNCTION in base R, not a contributed
package. That is to say, it is always available in R, not something you need to
load.
--
Sent from my phone. Please excuse my brevity.
On November 11, 2016 3:39:53 PM PST, Olu Ola via R-help
wrote:
>Here is the warning
Here is the warning message that appears when I tried installing the apply
package:
install.packages("apply")Installing package into
‘C:/Users/Olufemi/Documents/R/win-library/3.2’(as ‘lib’ is unspecified)Warning
in install.packages : package ‘apply’ is not available (for R version 3.2.2)
Regards
What makes you think " apply' does not work in R 3.2.2"?
On Nov 11, 2016 6:24 PM, "Olu Ola via R-help" wrote:
> Hello,I quite understand that apply is doing what it is supposed to do. I
> actually found that example online. However, "apply" package is not
> compatible with R 3.2.2 and as a resul
Hello,I quite understand that apply is doing what it is supposed to do. I
actually found that example online. However, "apply" package is not compatible
with R 3.2.2 and as a result, I could not use the code. That is why I am asking
for an alternative to "apply" that can be used to do the same t
Olu,
I think you may have misread what na.rm is supposed to do. I think you are
getting the correct value. If you want the vectors that contain NA values to be
evaluated to NA then you will need to set na.rm to FALSE (which is the default
for prod()).
prod(c(7, 2, NA), na.rm = TRUE)
[1] 14
pro
Df.1$D looks correct to me. For example, in the third row, 7*2=14 is
correct with the NA removed.
-Don
--
Don MacQueen
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
7000 East Ave., L-627
Livermore, CA 94550
925-423-1062
On 11/11/16, 12:45 PM, "R-help on behalf of Olu Ola via R-help"
wrote:
> He
Hello,I have a dataset that is similar to the one as follows:
> Df.1 <- data.frame(A = c(5,4,7,6,8,4),B =
> (c(1,5,2,4,9,1)),C=(c(2,3,NA,5,NA,9)))
> Df.1
A B C
1 5 1 2
2 4 5 3
3 7 2 NA
4 6 4 5
5 8 9 NA
6 4 1 9
> Df.1$D = apply(Df.1, 1, prod, na.rm=T)
> Df.1$D[1] 10 60 14 120 72 36
>
Ferri:
I am not sure that I adequately understand your question, but I'll
give it a shot.
1) Do a Web Search on "long form data"; in particular, the following
seemed to be most helpful, but you may prefer one of the other hits:
http://stanford.edu/~ejdemyr/r-tutorials/wide-and-long/
2) See ?res
I'm using the package Vennerable to make Venn diagrams, but it always makes a
box around the diagram.
Using standard R plots I could eliminate that by indicating
bty="n"
but it seems Vennerable uses the Grid package to generate its plots and I'm not
really familiar enough with Grid. I was lo
Like Peter, I too will assume that all the white space consists of space
characters, not tabs.
In that case, I would probably start with read.fwf().
I would expect that to get me a data frame with lots of NA in the first
four columns. Then (also like Peter says) you'll have to figure out how to
fi
I suggest that you post instead on the r-sig-mixed-models list which
specializes in just this sort of query, and where you are therefore
likely to receive a quicker more authoritative response.
Cheers,
Bert
Bert Gunter
"The trouble with having an open mind is that people keep coming along
and
I think that setting the ascii argument in the save command to TRUE might
give a human readable file.
If it'll work for what you want to do later, I don't know
HTH
Ulrik
On Fri, 11 Nov 2016 at 14:13 Ferri Leberl wrote:
>
>
> Thanks for your answer.
>
> I'm afraid it doesn't.
>
> The planned wo
Thanks for your answer.
I'm afraid it doesn't.
The planned workflow should be:
Somebody delivers me a table containing the essential relations of an
XML-schema in form of a list that should, once it is functional, be generated
out of R. So I need a form that is as universal as possible —
Hello,
You can save 3D objects (or objects of any form or shape) by using ?save.
You would then retrieve them with ?load.
Hope this helps,
Rui Barradas
Em 11-11-2016 09:36, Ferri Leberl escreveu:
Dear all,
I want to process a list of XML-Elements.
In one dimension the elements are listed; i
Hi
I did not use BoolNet package, but from documentation it seems that function
getAttractor requires object of class BooleanNetwork. However your object New
Text Document1 has class
[1] "tbl_df" "tbl""data.frame"
This is probably the reason for error. But for the getAttractors yo
Dear all,
I want to process a list of XML-Elements.
In one dimension the elements are listed; in the other their respective
properties (name, comment, parent, children, attributes).
I am writing a script that processes such tables, and another one that produces
sample tables to test the firs
Hello,
All the help I've read (including Pinheiro and Bates book, 'Mixed Effects
Models in S and S-PLUS') regarding how to fit a linear mixed-effects model
where variances change with a factor's levels indicates this is done through
the 'weights' argument to 'lme', using something like
'weight
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