Inline.
>
>
> On 07/26/2018 08:58 PM, JEFFERY REICHMAN wrote:
>
>> Given something like ...
>>
>> x <- c(3,2,4,3,5,4,3,2,4,5)
>> y <- c("A","B","B","A","A","A","A","B","A","B")
>> xy <- data.frame(x,y)
>> xy$w <- ifelse(xy$y=="A",xy$w[,x]*10,xy$w[,x]*15 )
>>
>
> You should learn the basics about h
On 07/26/2018 08:58 PM, JEFFERY REICHMAN wrote:
Given something like ...
x <- c(3,2,4,3,5,4,3,2,4,5)
y <- c("A","B","B","A","A","A","A","B","A","B")
xy <- data.frame(x,y)
xy$w <- ifelse(xy$y=="A",xy$w[,x]*10,xy$w[,x]*15 )
You should learn the basics about how to extract or replace part of a
I don't know the answer but here is the info for the ess list.
ess-h...@r-project.org mailing list
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/ess-help
On Thu, Jul 26, 2018 at 11:26 AM Rich Shepard
wrote:
>I used to be subscribed to the ess SIG, but cannot find any saved
> messages
> from that l
On Thu, 26 Jul 2018, Rich Shepard wrote:
I was not aware of this I've always used a single # for comment
everywhere that's the correct symbol. I'll try two of 'em.
Reading the 17.11 user guide I see what #, ##, and ### do. I also put the
suggested line to remove the fancy comments in ~/.emac
Suggest you contact the package maintainer.
?maintainer
Cheers,
Bert
Bert Gunter
"The trouble with having an open mind is that people keep coming along and
sticking things into it."
-- Opus (aka Berkeley Breathed in his "Bloom County" comic strip )
On Thu, Jul 26, 2018 at 9:49 AM, john matthew
Given something like ...
x <- c(3,2,4,3,5,4,3,2,4,5)
y <- c("A","B","B","A","A","A","A","B","A","B")
xy <- data.frame(x,y)
xy$w <- ifelse(xy$y=="A",xy$w[,x]*10,xy$w[,x]*15 )
want to see
x y w
1 3 A 30
2 2 B 30
3 4 B 60
4 3 A 30
5 5 A 50
6 4 A 40
7 3 A 30
8 2 B 30
9 4 A 40
10
On Thu, 26 Jul 2018, Marc Schwartz wrote:
There is a reasonable chance that your ESS version, given its age, may be
incompatible with some of the under the hood changes in Emacs since then,
including changes to variable names, etc.
Marc,
The build script fails because it cannot find an info
On Thu, 26 Jul 2018, jeremieju...@gmail.com wrote:
Do you use single # or double hash ## when you comment? as far as i know
there are 3 types of comment indentation on ESS.
#
##
###
In principle comment with # get centered.
Jeremie,
I was not aware of this I've always used a single # for c
Rich,
See inline below.
Marc
> On Jul 26, 2018, at 1:55 PM, Rich Shepard wrote:
>
> On Thu, 26 Jul 2018, Marc Schwartz wrote:
>
>> The full list of e-mail lists is here:
>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/
>> and the ESS-Help list is here:
>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/ess-h
Given
x <- c(3,2,4,3,5,4,3,2,4,5)
y <- c("A","B","B","A","A","A","A","B","A","B")
xy <- cbind(x,y)
and am wanting to create a new variable "w" where if y=="A" then w==x*10 else
w==x*15 such that I end up with a dataframe
x y w
[1,] 3 "A" 30
[2,] 2 "B" 30
[3,] 4 "B" 60
[4,] 3 "A" 30
Hello,
I'm not sure I understand your question correctly but I'll give it a try
anyway.
Do you use single # or double hash ## when you comment?
as far as i know there are 3 types of comment indentation on ESS.
#
##
###
In principle comment with # get centered.
Best regardsOn 26 Jul 2018 19:2
On Thu, 26 Jul 2018, Marc Schwartz wrote:
The full list of e-mail lists is here:
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/
and the ESS-Help list is here:
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/ess-help
which is also referenced on the ESS web site:
http://ess.r-project.org/index.php?Section=gettin
Hi Rich,
The full list of e-mail lists is here:
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/
and the ESS-Help list is here:
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/ess-help
which is also referenced on the ESS web site:
http://ess.r-project.org/index.php?Section=getting%20help
More than likely,
On Thu, 26 Jul 2018, Anthony Hirst wrote:
I don't know the answer but here is the info for the ess list.
ess-h...@r-project.org mailing list
https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/ess-help
Anthony,
Thanks! I thought that was the name but did not see it on the help page
and didn't think of lo
Hello all,
I am using the samplesize package (n.ttest function) to calculate
number of samples per group power analysis (t-tests with unequal
variance).
I can break this n.ttest function from the samplesize package,
depending on the standard deviations I input.
This works very good.
n.ttest(sd1
I used to be subscribed to the ess SIG, but cannot find any saved messages
from that list and I cannot find it in the list of mail lists on the r-project
web site. So I'll ask here.
Running ess-5.14 on emacs-25.3 I'm seeing a different behavior when I
write scripts than I had seen in the past
Harold,
I don't have much experience with ODBC/RODBC, but given that it's working on
Win, a driver problem seems plausible.
-Don
--
Don MacQueen
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
7000 East Ave., L-627
Livermore, CA 94550
925-423-1062
Lab cell 925-724-7509
On 7/26/18, 9:37 AM, "Doran,
Thanks for this. I'm using the RODBC stuff now. It works well and is currently
embedded in a shiny app. So, the entire SQL stuff is transparent to the user
who simply interacts with the UI. It appears to be working in a local windows
version. That is, I can successfully open the connection, do m
From my point of view, the logic is this:
If the external database is Oracle, use ROracle
If the external database is MySQL, use RMySQL
and similarly for other databases
If there is no R package specific to the database, then you drop back to RODBC
or RJDBC. Hopefully you can get the necessa
in the correct place, it could be that there
> is a missing newline on the last line. If that is the case, then R
> silently ignores that line.
>
> You might find the startup package helpful (disclaimer: I'm the
> author); For (4), you can run startup::check() and it'll tell y
tell you and
> fix potential issues like this one, e.g.
>
> > startup::check()
> Backed up R startup file: ‘~/.Rprofile’ (29 bytes) ->
> ‘~/.Rprofile.bak.20180726-122923’ (29 bytes)
> Warning message:
> In check_rprofile_eof(all = all, fix = fix, backup = backup, d
hat line.
You might find the startup package helpful (disclaimer: I'm the
author); For (4), you can run startup::check() and it'll tell you and
fix potential issues like this one, e.g.
> startup::check()
Backed up R startup file: ‘~/.Rprofile’ (29 bytes) ->
‘~/.Rprofile.bak.20180726-
> Doran, Harold
> on Wed, 25 Jul 2018 14:57:13 + writes:
> I'm doing some work now to learn which SQL database
> package is the most optimal for the task I am working on.
Hmm... we would have a problem with optimize() and optim() if
this was
optimal << more optima
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