' is not
a valid covariance list
Anyway, thanks for any thoughts you might have on this.
Alistair Campbell
--
Dr Alistair Campbell, PhD
Senior Lecturer in Clinical Psychology
School of Psychology
James Cook University
Townsville Queensland Australia
Ph: +61 7 47816879
. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
--
Dr Alistair Campbell, PhD
Senior Lecturer in Clinical Psychology
School of Psychology
James Cook University
Townsville Queensland Australia
Ph: +61 7 47816879
__
R-help@stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list
https
utility or whether there is an error in the headers for
the zip file.
Anyone have any advice?
Alistair Campbell
James Cook University
__
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
PLEASE do read the posting guide
Hi,
Disregard my post. I used another utility and it worked perfectly. The
others are obviously not up to the task!
Cheers
Alistair Campbell
__
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
PLEASE do read
message:
cannot open file `miceR/DESCRIPTION'
END QUOTE
I note from the web page that MiceR is described as a package for Unix
and I am running R on Windows XP. Does it make a difference to the package?
Thanks for any advice.
Alistair Campbell
James Cook University
[[alternative HTML
Development Core Team}},
organization = {R Foundation for Statistical Computing},
address = {Vienna, Austria},
year = 2004,
note = {ISBN 3-900051-00-3},
url = {http://www.R-project.org}
}
Seems to work.
Alistair Campbell
James Cook University
if there is a package developed
for evaluating clinical significance using Jacobson and Truax's, or
variations thereof, procedures?
Cheers
Alistair Campbell
School of Psychology
James Cook University
Townsville QLD
[[alternative HTML version deleted
, and PAN.
If not, does anyone know if someone has done the modification that would
make these packages available in R?
And/or, does anyone know of other packages that facilitate multiple
imputation of missing data that can be run from R?
Cheers
Alistair Campbell
School of Psychology
James Cook