On Fri, Sep 20, 2019 at 03:14:44PM +1200, Richard O'Keefe wrote:
> The one thing "slave" does not mean in technology is any kind of human
> being.
At risk of repeating what someone else said, we are most likely
not dealing with a human but with a "supernatural being, often
represented as of diminu
Wrong mailing list. Read the Posting Guide. And use plain-text format to avoid
us seeing something different than you intended.
On September 19, 2019 7:06:23 AM PDT, "s.rezaalavian--- via R-help"
wrote:
>Hello,
>
>I' have just tried to submit a package to CRAN which has a Bioconductor
>dependen
Nobody would use "stentorian" as an alternative to "verbose" because they
mean very different things.
"verbose" means "using many words"
"stentorian" means "talking very loudly, like Stentor, whose voice was as
powerful
as fifty voices of other men".
You can be verbose whi
On 19/09/2019 4:12 p.m., Roy Mendelssohn - NOAA Federal via R-help wrote:
Hi Ben:
Without commenting one way or another on your point, your initial post seemed
a lot like trolling because of:
Let me reiterate that it is 2019, i.e. "The Future", rather than 1970 when
R was presumably develope
Hi rhotuser,
Your question is really not about R, but about understanding IR
spectroscopy methods for soil composition. That's not my field, and
you will be lucky to find someone on this help list who is:
1) an expert in the field
2) willing to explain the methods used in the prospectr package
Mayb
Hello,
The following might be a better solution.
I include a minimal data set as an example.
Date <- c(rep(as.Date("2018-03-29"), 4),
rep(as.Date("2018-03-30"), 4),
rep(as.Date("2018-04-01"), 4))
ari18.test3 <- data.frame(Date)
ari18.test3$GameNum <- 1
#---
d <- c(0, diff
Hello,
There was no attachment, R-Help allows only a limited number of file
types, see the posting guide and try reposting.
As for the question, try ifelse, the vectorized fom of if/else.
ifelse(ari18.test3$Date > lag(ari18.test3$Date), ari18.tesm3$GameNum +
1, ari18.test3$gameNum)
(Not t
Hi Ben:
Without commenting one way or another on your point, your initial post seemed
a lot like trolling because of:
> Let me reiterate that it is 2019, i.e. "The Future", rather than 1970 when
> R was presumably developed, based on its atrocious syntax, documentation
> and usability (I think
On Thu, 19 Sep 2019 11:51:13 +0200
Benjamin Lang wrote:
> A new user, wanting to reduce output from R, would probably reach for
> “-q” or “—quiet”.
Not to argue against your point, but note that (1) --quiet is already a
flag which means something else and (2) --slave is not only a command
line o
On 9/19/19 1:11 AM, Jeff Newmiller wrote:
Since no answer has been forthcoming, my advice is to read the Posting Guide.
There is a more appropriate list for your question, and you should take the
warning about posting using plain text format on all r-project mailing lists
seriously.
On Sept
Hello,
I' have just tried to submit a package to CRAN which has a Bioconductor
dependency. I import "GeneticsPed" in my package but
when installing it, have this error:
ERROR: dependency 'GeneticsPed' is not available for package 'LRQMM'
* removing 'C:/Users/.../LRQMM'.
or this check:
Attached is every at bat for the Arizona Diamondback’s first three games of
2018 – BBdata1.rda. I added the Date and DHCode variables by parsing the first
variable labeled GameID.
BBdata2 is a reduced dataset with five variables as shown in the str() command.
data.frame':234 obs. of 5 var
Dear Sir,
I want to use the "prospectr" for the obtained spectra like the attached
file, "Nirspectra".
However, my understanding level of the data structure of "NIRsoil" is not yet
enough.
reference:
https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/prospectr/vignettes/prospectr-intro.pdf
data(NI
Dear Richard,
Thank you, that’s interesting. There is also something called an “etymological
fallacy”. I think current usage is more useful here than the “science of
truth”, i.e. the Ancient Greek idea that the (sometimes inferred) derivation of
a word allows us to grasp “the truth of it”.
In
> How, in late 2019, is there an option called "--slave" to "make R run as
quietly as possible"?
The word "slave" is fine for computer science because a) none tries to make a
real person slave and b) historical reasons and backwards compability. You may
be against b), but this is your problem.
Hi, i am try to generalize the Functional autoregressive model of order one
FAR(1) to FAR(p) through functional principle component by choosing a
particular amount of variation, then using the functional scores of functional
principle component for the prediction of vector autoregressive mode
I prefer backward compatibility to PC too, but since we're on the topic,
My personal PC advocacy is against the term blacklist always being associated
with some "negatives".
A search of CRAN found several packages using this term.
I advocate using a more descriptive term, such.
Falsepositiveli
On Wed, 18-Sep-2019 at 02:58PM -0700, Jeff Newmiller wrote:
|> I think there is no confusion except in the minds of those with
|> nothing better to do. I agree with Antirez, quoted in [1], which
|> nevertheless indicates that perspective lost the debate.
I agree with Jeff. Automotive hydraulics
One of my grandfathers was from Croatia. Guess what the word "slave" is
derived
from? That's right, Slavs. This goes back to the 9th century. And then
of course
my grandfather's people were enslaved by the Ottoman empire, which was only
defeated
a little over a hundred years ago. My other gran
Hi Christophe,
Your call to pyramid.plot is okay. I would make a couple of suggestions:
par(mar=pyramid.plot(males.overweight,females.overweight,
top.labels=c("Males","Labels","Females"),laxlab=seq(0,60,by=10),
raxlab=seq(0,30,by=10),labels=agelabels,lxcol="#74c476",rxcol="#9e9ac8",
gap=11,show
Since no answer has been forthcoming, my advice is to read the Posting Guide.
There is a more appropriate list for your question, and you should take the
warning about posting using plain text format on all r-project mailing lists
seriously.
On September 17, 2019 9:55:31 AM PDT, Thomas Knox wr
21 matches
Mail list logo