I am using the following code but I do not know the debug and run for
correct errors
library (tcltk)
file <-tclvalue (tkgetOpenFile ())
if (nchar (file))
{
tkmessageBox ("Select the file")
}
else
{
tkmessageBox (message = paste ("Was select file", file))
Dataset <
Dear mailing list,
I have a C function that gives me a wrong result when I run it under Windows
7.
This is the code under Linux (RHEL5):
> library(phenoTest)
> data(epheno)
> sign <- sample(featureNames(epheno))[1:20]
> score <- getFc(epheno)[,1]
> head(score)
1007_s_at 1053_at117_at121
On 10/20/2011 11:57 AM, Hadley Wickham wrote:
Generally, the absence of versioned dependencies makes it extremely
difficult to aggressively improve the design of a package.
I think that aggressively varying a given packages' API would be
confusing to most users, and damage acceptance of the pa
On Mon, Oct 24, 2011 at 6:04 AM, Evarist Planet
wrote:
> Dear mailing list,
>
> I have a C function that gives me a wrong result when I run it under Windows
> 7.
The fact that you extract pointers to the contents of fchr and sign
before coercing them to REALSXP is deeply suspicious to me, though
On 10/24/2011 06:04 AM, Evarist Planet wrote:
Dear mailing list,
I have a C function that gives me a wrong result when I run it under Windows
Hi Evarist --
It seems like this can be written reasonably efficiently in R?
getEs <-function(fchr, sign) {
nfchr <- length(fchr)
nsign <- len
On Fri, Oct 21, 2011 at 5:57 AM, Thaler, Thorn, LAUSANNE, Applied
Mathematics wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> Today I figured out that there is a neat function called droplevels,
> which, well, drops unused levels in a data frame. I tried the function
> with some of my data sets and it turned out that not
Le lundi 24 octobre 2011 à 03:31 -0700, RMSOPS a écrit :
> I am using the following code but I do not know the debug and run for
> correct errors
>
> library (tcltk)
>
>
> file <-tclvalue (tkgetOpenFile ())
>if (nchar (file))
>{
> tkmessageBox ("Select the file")
>}
> else
>
Hello
To be more specific, my problem is here
Line <-dataset $ Items [i]
print (line)
in.s <- strsplit (line, '')
I am reading lines from a file
Line 1 A, B, C, D, G
Line 2 A, C, E,
...
line n F, G
the problem is that I can not make the split of the comma, so I can not get
the
On 25 Oct 2011, at 00:34, RMSOPS wrote:
> To be more specific, my problem is here
> Line <-dataset $ Items [i]
> print (line)
> in.s <- strsplit (line, '')
>
> I am reading lines from a file
> Line 1 A, B, C, D, G
> Line 2 A, C, E,
> ...
> line n F, G
>
> the problem is that I can not make