Le 08/04/10 00:03, Davor Cubranic a écrit :
>
> Thank you both, Dirk and Romain, for the advice and to Romain for adding the
> Formula class. And I apologize for the unclear question. I was asking two or
> three things, but none of them directly. That's what happens when I try to
> fire off an e
Thank you both, Dirk and Romain, for the advice and to Romain for adding the
Formula class. And I apologize for the unclear question. I was asking two or
three things, but none of them directly. That's what happens when I try to fire
off an email late in the afternoon the last workday before a v
On 1 April 2010 at 17:04, Davor Cubranic wrote:
| Has anyone here used R curve-fitting from Rcpp? Like loess(), for example?
| Reading the R code, after a couple of layers of preliminaries to extract all
| the required parameters, it ends up in C (loess_raw) and Fortran (lowesw and
| lowesp).
I
Le 02/04/10 08:35, Romain Francois a écrit :
> Hello Davor,
>
> Rcpp gives you the tools, but it is up to you to use them.
>
> Le 02/04/10 02:04, Davor Cubranic a écrit :
>>
>> Has anyone here used R curve-fitting from Rcpp? Like loess(), for example?
>> Reading the R code, after a couple of layer
Hello Davor,
Rcpp gives you the tools, but it is up to you to use them.
Le 02/04/10 02:04, Davor Cubranic a écrit :
>
> Has anyone here used R curve-fitting from Rcpp? Like loess(), for example?
> Reading the R code, after a couple of layers of preliminaries to extract all
> the required param
Has anyone here used R curve-fitting from Rcpp? Like loess(), for example?
Reading the R code, after a couple of layers of preliminaries to extract all
the required parameters, it ends up in C (loess_raw) and Fortran (lowesw and
lowesp).
It would be nice if there were already code out there tha