Joe a écrit :
Dear userR,
With the following results, are they correct or acceptable?
What can I do to correct them if they are not correct?
http://cran.r-project.org/doc/FAQ/R-FAQ.html#Why-doesn_0027t-R-think-these-numbers-are-equal_003f
see also
?round
hih
This is now well off the topic of the subject line, but I am afraid some
misinformation has been propagated (and that is the `bug').
There _are_ bugs in the code shown: the postscript fonts support 32:255,
not 1:256, and pch:0:31 are not taken from the font. It seems an
uninformed
On Mon, 10 Oct 2005, Marc Schwartz wrote:
On Mon, 2005-10-10 at 19:50 -0400, Richard Hedger wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to ouput to a filled with a fixed precision:
eg. if I have data x=c(1.0,1.4,2.0), I want to be able to ouput the
following to a file:
1.00
1.40
The code below displays three graphs in three rows and one column but:
1. I want to remove the space between the graphs (I tried playing with position=
arg to print.trellis but it seems quite difficult to get the right
values and all
my attempts had space between them or had overlapping graphs.
Dear list,
we are a statistical/epidemiological departement that - after a few
years of rapid growth - finally is getting around to formulate a
general data storage and retention policy - mainly to ensure that we
can reproduce results from published papers/theses easier in the
future, but
Hello,
Why do I get doubt (NA) in the factor of test
classification even if I fix l (minimum vote)? By
setting l, no doubt should be occurred.
Look forward to your reply
Haleh
__
R-help@stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list
Gabor Grothendieck wrote:
The problem is that subset looks into its parent frame but in this
case the parent frame is not the environment in tt but the environment
in lapply since tt does not call subset directly but rather lapply does.
Try this which is similar except we have added the line
Thanks Uwe.
The R version I'm using is 2.1.1 on Mac OS 10.3.9
I was going to try and replicate this on a linux system at home but have
not had the time so far. I'll let you know how it goes.
Iain
Uwe Ligges wrote:
Iain Gallagher wrote:
Hi. Sorry (esp to Uwe for the repeated messages!)
Yes, I did get a very helpful reply from Marc Schwartz. I have
had substitute() working in legend(), when the legend argument
has length one. The challenge was to find some way to do the
equivalent of substitute() when several expressions appear in
parallel, as may be required for legend().
The
Thanks for that. Very instructive, and much appreciated.
And sorry, yes, I strayed well off the original topic. The Greek symbols
come out fine with font=5 in my locale,
Locale:
LC_CTYPE=en_GB.UTF-8;
LC_NUMERIC=C;
LC_TIME=en_GB.UTF-8;
I was interested in some of the other nice characters, for
As Gabor said, the issue here is that subset.data.frame() evaluates
the value of the `select' argument in the parent.frame(); Thus, if you
create a local function within lapply() (or sapply()) it works:
tt - function (n) {
x - list(data.frame(a = 1, b = 2), data.frame(a = 3, b = 4))
Alexander Ploner wrote:
Dear list,
we are a statistical/epidemiological departement that - after a few
years of rapid growth - finally is getting around to formulate a
general data storage and retention policy - mainly to ensure that we
can reproduce results from published
Dimitris Rizopoulos [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
As Gabor said, the issue here is that subset.data.frame() evaluates
the value of the `select' argument in the parent.frame(); Thus, if you
create a local function within lapply() (or sapply()) it works:
It's more complicated than that: It
Please do read the posting guide and supply a reproducible example as it
asks. Here it matters critically what you mean by `fix l' (to what
value?).
Is this knn in package class? Have you read the help page? Have you read
the references (especially the first)?
On Tue, 11 Oct 2005, Haleh
Joe wrote:
Dear userR,
With the following results, are they correct or acceptable?
Yes. See the FAQ:
7.31 Why doesn't R think these numbers are equal?
The only numbers that can be represented exactly in R's numeric type are
integers and fractions whose denominator is a power of 2. Other
Alexander Ploner wrote:
Dear list,
we are a statistical/epidemiological departement that - after a few
years of rapid growth - finally is getting around to formulate a
general data storage and retention policy - mainly to ensure that we
can reproduce results from published
On 10/10/05 3:54 PM, Kimpel, Mark William [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am using R with Bioconductor to perform analyses on large datasets
using bootstrap methods. In an attempt to speed up my work, I have
inquired about using our local supercomputer and asked the administrator
if he thought R
On Tue, 11 Oct 2005, Alexander Ploner wrote:
we are a statistical/epidemiological departement that - after a few
years of rapid growth - finally is getting around to formulate a
general data storage and retention policy - mainly to ensure that we
can reproduce results from published
On 10/11/05 6:54 AM, Duncan Murdoch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Alexander Ploner wrote:
Dear list,
we are a statistical/epidemiological departement that - after a few
years of rapid growth - finally is getting around to formulate a
general data storage and retention policy - mainly to ensure
Dear All,
I wonder if there is an R package to estimate the generalized linear mixed
models but with a random effects having a mixture of normals as a prior
distributinon ..
Thank you,
Abderrahim
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
__
On Tue, 2005-10-11 at 08:42 +0100, Prof Brian Ripley wrote:
On Mon, 10 Oct 2005, Marc Schwartz wrote:
On Mon, 2005-10-10 at 19:50 -0400, Richard Hedger wrote:
Hi,
I'm trying to ouput to a filled with a fixed precision:
eg. if I have data x=c(1.0,1.4,2.0), I want to be able to ouput the
I don't have anything specific to say. Only the following suggestion:
Try and find out where in the code most of the time is spent. R has nice
tools for that. See ?Rprof. If it's runifpoint() and Kest() that are
taking most of the computing time, you may not be able to do much better.
Andy
estimable in bundle gregmisc (package gmodels) should do this.
(Kiebitzers: Hope I got the bundle/package/library definition correct)
FWIW, we tried gregmisc as a bundle, but it proved to be too much of a pain,
so all of the component packages are now separately provided.
The 'gremgisc'
I'm using R 2.2.0 on an up-to-date version of Fedora Core 4 with the
latest version of Hmisc. When I run an example from the latex function I
get the following:
x - matrix(1:6, nrow=2, dimnames=list(c('a','b'),c('c','d','enLine
2')))
x
c d enLine 2
a 1 35
b 2 46
latex(x) #
On Tue, 11 Oct 2005, joerg van den hoff wrote:
many thanks to thomas and gabor for their help. both solutions solve my
problem perfectly.
but just as an attempt to improve my understanding of the inner workings of R
(similar problems are sure to come up ...) two more question:
1.
why
Just one simple shortening of DR's solution:
tt - function (n) {
x - list(data.frame(a=1,b=2), data.frame(a=3,b=4))
print(sapply(x, function(...) subset(...), select = n))
}
n - b
tt(a)
On 10/11/05, Dimitris Rizopoulos [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As Gabor said, the issue here is that
Dear R users.
I was wondering if you could help me with this error message I get when I try
to install packages.
I just installed R (the latest version, R 2.2.0) on my laptop (windows), and I
was trying to install packages intwo ways:
1) Packages Install Package(s)...
2) Packages Install
I expect you need to set a proxy. This is covered in the rw-FAQ that we
do ask you to read before posting. See the item
The internet download functions fail.
On Tue, 11 Oct 2005, Giannitrapani, Marco GSUK-GSSC wrote:
Dear R users.
I was wondering if you could help me with this
Hello list,
I am writing a paper for Rnews. I use Sweave to do it. I did not find
information about writing a paper for Rnews using Sweave and have some
questions:
- Is there a problem to use the environment 'Sinput' in the place of
'example' or 'smallexample'. It works fine but perhaps there
Dear All,
Can I solve a Set Covering Problem (in a mathgraph) using R?
Which package should I use for that?
Thank you in advance.
Sara Maltez Mouro
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
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R-help@stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list
ecatchpole [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Thanks for that. Very instructive, and much appreciated.
And sorry, yes, I strayed well off the original topic. The Greek symbols
come out fine with font=5 in my locale,
Locale:
LC_CTYPE=en_GB.UTF-8;
LC_NUMERIC=C;
Le 11 Octobre 2005 11:18, Stéphane Dray a écrit :
- I have some long lines of code in schunk. I did not find any way to
cut them in the Rnw file and they appear out of the column in the dvi
file. The only solution I found is to cut these lines in the tex file
generated by Sweave. Is there a
A general comment.
As usual, Brian is right on target. Indeed, this has been written,
conferenced, agonized, kvetched, etc. about extensively in the computer
science community (and no doubt, among many others ... like accountants). I
seem to remember reading a Scientific American Magazine
Can anyone suggest a good non-parametric test, and an R implementation of the
test, that allows for two or more factors? Wilcoxon signed rank allows for
only one.
Thanks,
John
John Sorkin M.D., Ph.D.
Chief, Biostatistics and Informatics
Baltimore VA Medical Center GRECC and
University of
Hello everyone,
I am currently teaching an intermediate stats.
course at UCSD Extension using R. We are using
Venables and Ripley as the primary text for the
course, with Freund Wilson's Statistical Methods as
a secondary reference.
I recently gave a homework assignment on logistic
?kruskal.test
2005/10/11, John Sorkin [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Can anyone suggest a good non-parametric test, and an R implementation of the
test, that allows for two or more factors? Wilcoxon signed rank allows for
only one.
Thanks,
John
John Sorkin M.D., Ph.D.
Chief, Biostatistics and
I suspect that John may be looking for ?friedman.test, which I believe
will allow for a two-way non-parametric test.
kruskal.test() will perform a non-parametric test on two or more samples
(or factor levels) as a generalization of wilcox.test() for one or two
samples (or factor levels).
HTH,
On Tue, 2005-10-11 at 10:01 -0400, Rick Bilonick wrote:
I'm using R 2.2.0 on an up-to-date version of Fedora Core 4 with the
latest version of Hmisc. When I run an example from the latex function I
get the following:
x - matrix(1:6, nrow=2, dimnames=list(c('a','b'),c('c','d','enLine
2')))
Hello all R users,
My simulation function works correctly, but I have problems with plot
function. You will find the following code using it.
Thank you for your help
##
simulation - function(k, n){
conc - seq(0,10,by=0.5)
#choixg - seq(1,
You're fitting two different models.
The latter is saying: logit(p)=x+e, where e is a normal error, so that
logit(p) is normal.
lm fits a Linear Model, which uses normal error.
The former says that p is Bernoulli; and p~Bernoulli does not imply
logit(p) is normal.
A Generalized Linear Model has
One of these is modelling the mean of the logit of p, the other is
modelling the logit of the mean of p. They aren't the same.
-thomas
On Tue, 11 Oct 2005, Daniel Pick wrote:
Hello everyone,
I am currently teaching an intermediate stats.
course at UCSD Extension using R. We are
Hi all,
I've got a script that generates a few moderate-size data frames, and then
puts them together into one big data frame at the end in order to write that
data frame to disk, so that it may be re-opened later on...
I'm trying to trim down memory requirements in this script, so I was
Can anyone think of a way to create a pretty() sequence that excludes
zero? Or a way to remove the zero from a sequence after using pretty()?
Thanks,
- Jason
Jason Horn
Boston University Department of Biology
5 Cumington Street Boston, MA 02215
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
office: 617 353 6987
cell:
Marc Schwartz (via MN) [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I suspect that John may be looking for ?friedman.test, which I believe
will allow for a two-way non-parametric test.
You could be right, but you could also be wrong... It depends quite a
bit on what is meant by a two-factor comparison of means.
Peter,
Good points all around.
Hopefully John will provide further clarification.
Best regards,
Marc
On Tue, 2005-10-11 at 19:46 +0200, Peter Dalgaard wrote:
Marc Schwartz (via MN) [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I suspect that John may be looking for ?friedman.test, which I believe
will
Jason Horn [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Can anyone think of a way to create a pretty() sequence that excludes
zero? Or a way to remove the zero from a sequence after using pretty()?
The former is rather hard because zero is generally considered just
about the prettiest number around...
As for
Dear all,
I am still learning R with write a small function for my self.
I was wondering if someone can help me to write a R function formula below:
Z_k (x) = \sum_{i=0}^{i=k} \binom{n}{i} (m-1)^i
Thanks a million in advance,
Sincerely,
Jan Sabee
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
I'm using read.csv to read in a csv file containing '#' characters. For
example, say I'm reading the following file (test.csv):
var1,var2,var3
a,b,c
d,e#,f
g,h,i
It outputs:
read.csv(Raw Data\\test.csv)
var1 var2 var3
1abc
2de
3ghi
Warning message:
Is there a way to get the aspect ratio as output from a plot() call or
something similar in the base graphics system? I would like to note
vertical exaggeration on an elevation profile.
Thanks,
Scott Waichler
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi, there:
I spent some time on this but I think I really cannot figure it out, maybe I
missed something here:
my data looks like this:
dim(trn3)
[1] 7361 209
dim(val3)
[1] 7427 209
mg.rf2-randomForest(x=trn3[,1:208], y=trn3[,209], data=trn3, xtest=val3[,
1:208], ytest=val3[,209],
Michel Friesenhahn wrote:
I'm using read.csv to read in a csv file containing '#' characters. For
example, say I'm reading the following file (test.csv):
var1,var2,var3
a,b,c
d,e#,f
g,h,i
It outputs:
read.csv(Raw Data\\test.csv)
var1 var2 var3
1abc
2de
I am sorry for bother. I think I figured that out.
the result of votes for test data is not rf$votes, but rf$test$votes
On 10/11/05, Weiwei Shi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi, there:
I spent some time on this but I think I really cannot figure it out, maybe
I missed something here:
my data
Jan Sabee wrote:
Dear all,
I am still learning R with write a small function for my self.
I was wondering if someone can help me to write a R function formula below:
Z_k (x) = \sum_{i=0}^{i=k} \binom{n}{i} (m-1)^i
Thanks a million in advance,
Sincerely,
Jan Sabee
(This smells like a
Never mind on my previous question below. read.csv(Raw
Data\\test.csv,comment.char=) does it.
Mike
I'm using read.csv to read in a csv file containing '#' characters. For
example, say I'm reading the following file (test.csv):
var1,var2,var3
a,b,c
d,e#,f
g,h,i
It outputs:
read.csv(Raw
Waichler, Scott R wrote:
Is there a way to get the aspect ratio as output from a plot() call or
something similar in the base graphics system? I would like to note
vertical exaggeration on an elevation profile.
Thanks,
Scott Waichler
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
[EMAIL
Here is one way to do a paired permutation test:
perm1 - function(x,y){
rb - rbinom(length(x),1,0.5)
xp - ifelse(rb==1, x, y)
yp - ifelse(rb==1, y, x)
ks.test(xp,yp)$statistic
}
my.x - rnorm(100)
my.y - my.x + rnorm(100, 0.2, 0.1)
mystat -
Michel Friesenhahn [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm using read.csv to read in a csv file containing '#' characters. For
example, say I'm reading the following file (test.csv):
var1,var2,var3
a,b,c
d,e#,f
g,h,i
It outputs:
read.csv(Raw Data\\test.csv)
var1 var2 var3
1ab
Sundar,
Perhaps this will work for you?
plot(1:10)
w - par(pin)[1]/diff(par(usr)[1:2])
h - par(pin)[2]/diff(par(usr)[3:4])
asp - w/h
Thank you for your help. For vertical exaggeration I will make a slight
change to make it more intuitive (for me):
w - diff(par(usr)[1:2]) / par(pin)[1]
Hello,
Using the following code i want to make a level or contourplot of some
data that I produced
library(grid);library(lattice);
mydata - read.table(avgee.dat);
mymat - as.matrix(mydata);
mymat -t(mymat)
vals-as.vector(mymat);
conc-c(0.0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 3.5, 4, 4.5, 5);
a- c(0.01,
Tom Lenaerts wrote:
Hello,
Using the following code i want to make a level or contourplot of some
data that I produced
library(grid);library(lattice);
No need to explicitly load grid. This is done when attaching
lattice. Also, you do not need any ; at the end of any lines.
mydata
Hi, there:
I am trying nnet as followed:
mg.nnet-nnet(x=trn3[,r.v[1:100]], y=trn3[,209], size=5, decay = 5e-4,
maxit = 200)
# weights: 511
initial value 13822.108453
iter 10 value 7408.169201
iter 20 value 7362.201934
iter 30 value 7361.669408
iter 40 value 7361.294379
iter 50 value 7361.045190
Dear Sundar
Thanks a lot, this resolves the problem of the warning messages.
Yet it does not produce the plot: I only get a blank Quartz panel (i'm
using R on Mac OS X 1.3). I attached the file and the corrected code.
Maybe it is a problem of the data?
library(lattice);
mydata -
Ken Termiso wrote:
Hi all,
I've got a script that generates a few moderate-size data frames, and then
puts them together into one big data frame at the end in order to write that
data frame to disk, so that it may be re-opened later on...
I'm trying to trim down memory requirements in
Berton Gunter wrote:
A general comment.
As usual, Brian is right on target. Indeed, this has been written,
conferenced, agonized, kvetched, etc. about extensively in the computer
science community (and no doubt, among many others ... like accountants). I
seem to remember reading a
On 10/11/05, Gabor Grothendieck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The code below displays three graphs in three rows and one column but:
1. I want to remove the space between the graphs (I tried playing with
position=
arg to print.trellis but it seems quite difficult to get the right
values and all
I have to correct my previous reply.
The changes you propose work The strange thing is that if I upload
the R-script to
produce the plot from file using
source(/Users/tomlenaerts/Programming/ObjC/Tools/AllEE/build/EEcont.R)
The script does not work.
When I copy-past the script myself into
Tom Lenaerts wrote:
I have to correct my previous reply.
The changes you propose work The strange thing is that if I upload the
R-script to
produce the plot from file using
source(/Users/tomlenaerts/Programming/ObjC/Tools/AllEE/build/EEcont.R)
The script does not work.
When I
Jason Horn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can anyone think of a way to create a pretty() sequence that excludes
zero?
You could use except(pretty(x), 0), if you first defined the (quite
useful) set-operation function:
R except - function(a,b) unique(a[!match(a, b, 0)])
(Consider this a plug to
KOITA Lassana - STAC/ACE wrote:
Hello all R users,
My simulation function works correctly, but I have problems with plot
function. You will find the following code using it.
Thank you for your help
##
simulation - function(k, n){
Weiwei Shi wrote:
Hi, there:
I am trying nnet as followed:
mg.nnet-nnet(x=trn3[,r.v[1:100]], y=trn3[,209], size=5, decay = 5e-4,
maxit = 200)
# weights: 511
initial value 13822.108453
iter 10 value 7408.169201
iter 20 value 7362.201934
iter 30 value 7361.669408
iter 40 value
Martin Henry H. Stevens wrote:
Hello all:
I frequently have glm models in which the residual variance is much
lower than the residual degrees of freedom (e.g. Res.Dev=30.5, Res.DF
= 82). Is it appropriate for me to use a quasipoisson error
distribution and test it with an F
On Mon, 10 Oct 2005, Martin Henry H. Stevens wrote:
Hello all:
I frequently have glm models in which the residual variance is much
lower than the residual degrees of freedom (e.g. Res.Dev=30.5, Res.DF
= 82). Is it appropriate for me to use a quasipoisson error
distribution and test it with
Hi,
I repost my question following the guide:
trn3 is my dataset:
str(trn3)
`data.frame': 7361 obs. of 209 variables:
$ V1 : num -0.931 -0.955 -0.843 -0.963 -0.967 ...
$ V2 : num -0.4343 -0.0101 0.0707 -0.0909 -1. ...
$ V3 : num -0.979 -0.979 -0.979 -0.980 -0.979 ...
$ V4 : num -0.987 -0.987
Ken Kelley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
I have a problem that I have been unable to determine either the best
way to proceed and why the methods I'm trying to use sometimes fail. I'm
using the pf() function in an optimization function to find a
noncentrality parameter that leads to a specific
Within an R dataset, I have a date field called date_. (The dates are in the
format -MM-DD, e.g. 1995-12-01.)
How can I add or subtract 1 month from this date, to get 1996-01-01 or
1995-11-01.
-
[[alternative
Hi
Stéphane Dray wrote:
Hello list,
I am writing a paper for Rnews. I use Sweave to do it. I did not find
information about writing a paper for Rnews using Sweave and have some
questions:
- Is there a problem to use the environment 'Sinput' in the place of
'example' or 'smallexample'.
Hello,
I hope all is well. I've gone through and searched just about all the
manuals, faqs, contribs available on the data import/export process and
have not found any answer to a specific question. Hopefully, I will be
able to fall back upon the valuable expertise in mailing list. Here goes:
Hello,
I hope all is well. I've gone through and searched just about all the
manuals, faqs, contribs available on the data import/export process and
have not found any answer to a specific question. Hopefully, I will be
able to fall back upon the valuable expertise in mailing list. Here goes:
On 10/11/05, Gabor Grothendieck [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks. That works although the alignment is still not perfect.
I am attaching the saved image in both .png and .emf formats
so you can see what I mean. Its not far off but its noticeable.
In .emf format a portion of the bounding box
Have you considered writing a function to do the complex math and
then calling nls referring to that function? Consider the following
(not tried):
expg - function(a., x, G0, R, T){
exp((a.[1]+(a.[2]*x)^(1/2)-G0)/(R*T))
}
mynls-nls(formula=y~expg(a.=c(a, b), x=x, G0=G0, R=R,
Have you received a reply or otherwise resolved this issue? If no,
have you tried to construct the simplest possible example that comes to
your mind. Sometimes in the course of trying that, I often figure out
what the error message means. If you try this without getting the
answer
On Tue, 2005-10-11 at 18:55 -0500, Ratnendra Sharma wrote:
Hello,
I hope all is well. I've gone through and searched just about all the
manuals, faqs, contribs available on the data import/export process and
have not found any answer to a specific question. Hopefully, I will be
able to
I have observed the following behavior, wondering if it is a bug
before I submit a report.
I am using the plot function with call: plot(X, Y,
col=red, . . . ) where X is an object that inherits from classes
'dates' and 'times' (created with the 'dates' function from package
'chron') and
On Tue, 2005-10-11 at 16:26 -0700, t c wrote:
Within an R dataset, I have a date field called date_. (The dates are
in the format -MM-DD, e.g. 1995-12-01.)
How can I add or subtract 1 month from this date, to get 1996-01-01 or
1995-11-01.
There might be an easier way to do this, but
Dear R user:
I wonder if it is possible to run monte carlo simulation
with dse2 package(MonteCarloSimulations function) using ordinary
differential equation. How do I define the model? Or if there are any
functions which can run monte carlo simulation using ordinary differential
equation.
On Tue, 2005-10-11 at 16:07 -1000, Parlamis Franklin wrote:
I have observed the following behavior, wondering if it is a bug
before I submit a report.
I am using the plot function with call: plot(X, Y,
col=red, . . . ) where X is an object that inherits from classes
'dates' and
There may be a few problems where ML (or more generally Bayes) fails
to give sensible answers, but they are relatively rare.
What is your likelihood? How many parameters are you trying to
estimate?
Are you using constrained or unconstrained optimization? If
I just got 145 hits from RSiteSearch(debugger). Does this help?
spencer graves
Omar Lakkis wrote:
Is there a log4j, or similar, package for R?
__
R-help@stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list
## Code was long, so I simplified it by creating vectors from scratch
so it would run as is. Putative bug is still evidenced on the x axis
discount.factors.dates - seq.dates(from=09/30/2005, to=09/30/2035)
rates-seq(4.4, 5.2, by=0.0025);
plot(discount.factors.dates[1:length(rates)], rates,
Thanks for the code and the clarifications, including the PDF file.
Yes, I can replicate the behavior here (R 2.2.0 on FC4) and I am cc:ing
Kurt Hornik, who ported chron to R and is the chron package maintainer.
It appears that the culprit is the argument 'col = red', which
towards the end of
On Tue, 2005-10-11 at 17:16 -0400, Kjetil Holuerson wrote:
Martin Henry H. Stevens wrote:
Hello all:
I frequently have glm models in which the residual variance is much
lower than the residual degrees of freedom (e.g. Res.Dev=30.5, Res.DF
= 82). Is it appropriate for me to use a
Earl,
I don't think that's a bug. Try
pdf(font5.pdf, onefile=FALSE)
and similarly for postscript().
Ted.
On 12/10/05 01:23, Earl F. Glynn wrote,:
ecatchpole [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Thanks for that. Very instructive, and much appreciated.
And sorry, yes,
no, there isn't a general logging package.
On 10/12/05, Spencer Graves [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I just got 145 hits from RSiteSearch(debugger). Does this help?
spencer graves
Omar Lakkis wrote:
Is there a log4j, or similar, package for R?
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