Hi Jean,
now that you've been told `the truth' .. :
If you'd like to carefully look at symbols() and its help page and see
which arguments ('axes' but maybe more) would be useful to pass
to plot.default and if you provide enhanced versions of the two files
https://svn.r-project.org/R/trunk
> "Greg" == Warnes, Gregory R <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> on Tue, 17 Jan 2006 14:48:46 -0500 writes:
Greg> The 'mixedsort' function in the 'gtools' package does
Greg> this. It is probably slower than the c version you
Greg> point to, but it is already working in R.
Thank you, G
Greg Kochanski wrote:
> Well, I don't know how it can be precise
> and correct when it has dangling antecedents.
> Gramatically speaking, that's the equivalent of
> an uninitialized pointer.
I don't think there is anything "dangling" there. What the paragraph
assumes (and quite patently wrongly)
Full_Name: Utz J. Pape
Version: 2.2.0
OS: linux
Submission from: (NULL) (141.14.23.12)
If I use phyper and set parameter x equal to k (meaning that all balls I draw
are white) phyper returns 1 which is not (always) correct:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~> R2.2.0 --vanilla
R : Copyright 2005, The R Foundat
On Wed, 18 Jan 2006 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Full_Name: Utz J. Pape
> Version: 2.2.0
> OS: linux
> Submission from: (NULL) (141.14.23.12)
>
>
> If I use phyper and set parameter x equal to k (meaning that all balls I draw
> are white) phyper returns 1 which is not (always) correct:
I think you
Well, you make two very strong assumptions.
First, that your readers start in the beginning and read to the
end.
Second, that your readers are sufficiently dedicated to learn
your terminology.
The first is false: I got to that page via Google.
The second is only true in varying degrees,
and I wo
Well, you make two very strong assumptions.
First, that your readers start in the beginning and read to the
end.
Second, that your readers are sufficiently dedicated to learn
your terminology.
The first is false: I got to that page via Google.
The second is only true in varying degrees,
and I wo
Quite a while back we set the goal of running R in 16Mb RAM, as people (I
think Kjetil) had teaching labs that small.
Since then R has grown, and we has recently started to optimize R for
speed rather than size. I recently tested R-devel on my ancient Win98
notebook with 64Mb RAM -- it ran but
Last week Giovanni Parrinello posted a message asking why various packages were
loaded when he loaded an .Rdata file. Brian Ripley replied saying he thought it
was because the saved workspace contained a reference to the namespace of
ipred. (Correspondence copied below).
This begs the question:
On Wed, 18 Jan 2006, Heather Turner wrote:
[Lines wrapped for legibility and R-help removed as it is not an
appropriate list.]
> Last week Giovanni Parrinello posted a message asking why various
> packages were loaded when he loaded an .Rdata file. Brian Ripley replied
> saying he thought it w
I'm replying to R-devel, the mailing list which should be used
to discuss R feature enhancements.
> "Norman" == Norman Warthmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> on Wed, 18 Jan 2006 11:33:22 +0100 writes:
Norman> ..
Norman> Is there a specific reason why in the ecdf-function
Full_Name: Bob Donahue
Version: 2.2
OS: Mac OS 10.3.9
Submission from: (NULL) (204.152.13.26)
That's pretty much it. I did the most basic install possible, tried running the
package through the GUI and on the command line, it crashed hard, immediately,
with absolutely NO useful information as to
Apologies - I was not trying to correct you Brian, but to explore how the
situation could arise. I'm sure you had a good idea why the namespace (or a
reference to it) had been saved, but this was not clear to me and I thought,
possibly not to others either.
Thanks for putting me right over pare
On Wed, 18 Jan 2006, Martin Maechler wrote:
> Hi Jean,
>
> now that you've been told `the truth' .. :
>
> If you'd like to carefully look at symbols() and its help page and see
> which arguments ('axes' but maybe more) would be useful to pass
> to plot.default and if you provide enhanced version
This won't actually help you at all, but I used the standard install on OS
10.3.9 (Powerbook G4) just last week without any problems.
On the other hand, my install was on a machine that had previously had
other versions of R.
-thomas
On Wed, 18 Jan 2006, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Fu
Good idea. Done.
-G
> -Original Message-
> From: Martin Maechler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, January 18, 2006 4:02 AM
> To: Warnes, Gregory R
> Cc: Andrew Piskorski; R Development Mailing List
> Subject: Re: [Rd] natural sorting
>
>
> > "Greg" == Warnes, Gregory R <
Full_Name: Mike Prager
Version: 2.2.1
OS: Windows XP with SP2
Submission from: (NULL) (205.156.36.17)
When several EPS files are made with one invocation of postscript(), only the
first displays correctly in gsview. Examination of the generated eps files with
a diff utility reveals that subsequen
In my example, I should have included the defaults to the wrapper
function in its definition, rather than in the call to postscript().
That of course does NOT affect the validity of my bug report nor the
ability of my example to demonstrate it.
MHP
Let me add that you should probably have a crash report on your
system. See Console.app inside "Utilities" and search for R.app or R
crash report. Check if date/time of the log is the right one and send
it to us.
Did you have a previous version of R.app installed? An old one?
Because the prob
On Tue, 17 Jan 2006 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Full_Name: Jonathan Swinton
> Version: 2.2.1
> OS: Windows
> Submission from: (NULL) (193.132.159.169)
>
>
> #The first line of description for data.matrix says that it will
> # 'Return the matrix obtained by converting all the variables in a
> #
Hi,
I am new to R and I would like to display an image on a plane in a 3D plot,
i.e. I would like to be able to specify a theta and a phi parameters like in
the function persp to display a 2D image on an inclined plane.
Regards,
vincent
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
__
Full_Name: Pierre Legendre
Version: 2.1.1
OS: Mac OSX 10.4.3
Submission from: (NULL) (132.204.120.81)
I am reporting the mis-behaviour of the function 'eigen' in 'base', for the
following input matrix:
A <- matrix(c(2,3,4,-1,3,1,1,-2,0),3,3)
eigen(A)
I obtain the following results, which are in
Pantelis Vlachos (the StatLib admin) and I figured out what the
problems with the CRAN mirror on StatLib were and he seems to have
fixed all problems in the mirroring process.
Please let us know if you still observe problems with the StatLib
mirror.
Best,
--
--
23 matches
Mail list logo