Full_Name: Carsten Urbach
Version: 2.1.1 (2005-06-20)
OS: Linux
Submission from: (NULL) (141.34.5.241)
I observed one case where nls failed to return the correlation matrix, while the
parameter estimates were computed correctly. In the follwing I include all the
commands leading to this problem.
> "Douglas" == Douglas Grove <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> on Thu, 8 Sep 2005 15:33:02 -0700 (PDT) writes:
Douglas> Hi,
Douglas> It would be great if someone would add write.delim() as an
Douglas> adjunct to write.table(), just as with write.csv().
Douglas> I store a lot of da
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> Full_Name: Carsten Urbach
> Version: 2.1.1 (2005-06-20)
> OS: Linux
> Submission from: (NULL) (141.34.5.241)
>
>
> I observed one case where nls failed to return the correlation matrix, while
> the
> parameter estimates were computed correctly. In the follwing I inc
[Moved from R-help]
James Wettenhall wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to debug an R interface to a Fortran subroutine from Windows.
> (Yes, I know I should try Unix/Linux as well, but a quick attempt
> suggested that the (MinGW g77) Fortran compiler I have installed on my
> Windows laptop works bette
> Kasper Daniel Hansen writes:
> Hi
> We are currently embedding a rather large C++ library in R (BioC),
> and we want some comments on the portability of how we have approach
> this.
> First of, we are not really able to do much about the portability of
> the basic library, which of co
Hi
I have written a whole bunch of methods for objects of class "octonion".
[
an octonion is a single column of an eight-row matrix. Octonions have
their own multiplication rules and are a generalization of quaternions,
which are columns of a four-row matrix.
]
So far I've done about a dozen ge
On 9/9/05, Robin Hankin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi
>
> I have written a whole bunch of methods for objects of class "octonion".
>
> [
> an octonion is a single column of an eight-row matrix. Octonions have
> their own multiplication rules and are a generalization of quaternions,
> which are
On Fri, 9 Sep 2005, Martin Maechler wrote:
> > "Douglas" == Douglas Grove <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > on Thu, 8 Sep 2005 15:33:02 -0700 (PDT) writes:
>
> Douglas> Hi,
> Douglas> It would be great if someone would add write.delim() as an
> Douglas> adjunct to write.table(), jus
Dear R community,
I have a question on how R manages memory allocation in .Fortran()
calls under Windows.
In brief, apparently, it is not possible to allocate large matrices
inside a Fortran subroutine
unless you pass them as arguments. If you do not act in this way
RGUI crashes with a stack ove
On 9/9/05, Thomas Lumley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Many packages have a NEWS or ChangeLog file describing changes. You would
> typically have to look at the source package to find them, since by Unix
> tradition they are usually in the top-level directory and so are not
> included in the bin
On Fri, 9 Sep 2005, Gabor Grothendieck wrote:
>
> I personally put NEWS, WISHLIST and THANKS files in the 'inst'
> directory of all my source packages. This has the effect of copying them to
> the
> top level of the built version so that they are accessible from R via:
>
I'm not sure that WISHLI
On 9/9/05, Thomas Lumley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, 9 Sep 2005, Gabor Grothendieck wrote:
> >
> > I personally put NEWS, WISHLIST and THANKS files in the 'inst'
> > directory of all my source packages. This has the effect of copying them
> > to the
> > top level of the built version so
On 9/9/2005 1:04 PM, Simone Giannerini wrote:
> Dear R community,
>
> I have a question on how R manages memory allocation in .Fortran()
> calls under Windows.
> In brief, apparently, it is not possible to allocate large matrices
> inside a Fortran subroutine
> unless you pass them as arguments.
Simone,
On Sep 9, 2005, at 1:04 PM, Simone Giannerini wrote:
> Dear R community,
>
> I have a question on how R manages memory allocation in .Fortran()
> calls under Windows.
> In brief, apparently, it is not possible to allocate large matrices
> inside a Fortran subroutine
I suspect that th
On Fri, 9 Sep 2005, Gabor Grothendieck wrote:
> How about if there were just a standard location and name such as inst/NEWS,
> inst/WISHLIST, inst/THANKS (which has the advantage that they are
> automatically
> made available in the built package under the current way packages are
> built)
The pr
On 9/9/05, Thomas Lumley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, 9 Sep 2005, Gabor Grothendieck wrote:
> > How about if there were just a standard location and name such as inst/NEWS,
> > inst/WISHLIST, inst/THANKS (which has the advantage that they are
> > automatically
> > made available in the bui
On 9 Sep 2005, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have written a whole bunch of methods for objects of class
> "octonion".
>
> So far I've done about a dozen generic functions such as
> seq.octonion(), rep.octonion(), [<-.octonion(), and so on and so on.
>
> Very nearly all of these functions are appli
On 8 Sep 2005, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>> installing inst files installing data files installing man source
>>> files installing indices cannot create
>>> d:/biocbld/R-devel/doc/html/search/index.txt: permission denied
>
> I was also annoyed about this point a couple of times. But what are
> po
I've just committed some changes to allow R to be built and to use
MikTeX without needing the Rd.sty files to be installed to localtexmf.
Unfortunately, the changes are not compatible with other TeX packages,
so if you're not using MikTeX you'll need to edit a couple of the config
files (or set
Great. What specifically is the change?
On 9/9/05, Duncan Murdoch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've just committed some changes to allow R to be built and to use
> MikTeX without needing the Rd.sty files to be installed to localtexmf.
> Unfortunately, the changes are not compatible with other TeX
Gabor Grothendieck wrote:
> Great. What specifically is the change?
There are a number of changes to make use of the --include-directory
command line option that Miktex supports. It needed to be done in
several places because tex is called from makefiles, Perl and shell scripts.
Duncan Murdoc
In R 2.2.0 I find that even if I use \dontshow in the examples section
of an .Rd file that the code still shows.
Has anyone else seen this?
Are there any packages that use this facility that I could
try in order to check this?
I am using
> R.version.string # XP
"R version 2.2.0, 2005-09-0
On 9/9/05, Duncan Murdoch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've just committed some changes to allow R to be built and to use
> MikTeX without needing the Rd.sty files to be installed to localtexmf.
> Unfortunately, the changes are not compatible with other TeX packages,
> so if you're not using MikTeX
On 9/9/05, Duncan Murdoch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've just committed some changes to allow R to be built and to use
> MikTeX without needing the Rd.sty files to be installed to localtexmf.
> Unfortunately, the changes are not compatible with other TeX packages,
> so if you're not using MikTeX
On 9/9/05, Gabor Grothendieck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In R 2.2.0 I find that even if I use \dontshow in the examples section
> of an .Rd file that the code still shows.
>
> Has anyone else seen this?
>
> Are there any packages that use this facility that I could
> try in order to check this?
Thanks very much to Uwe, Duncan and Seth (who replied off the list).
Uwe - That section of the R for Windows FAQ was very useful - thanks!
Sorry I posted a question involving C/Fortran to R-Help.
Duncan - Thanks for all the useful info. I've bookmarked the pages you
sent me.
Seth - Thanks for
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