Take a look at package 'mitools' and
http://faculty.washington.edu/tlumley/survey/svymi.html
for some examples in analyzing multiply-imputed survey data.
> Hi
> I have used the amelia command from the Amelia R package. this gives me
> a number
> of imputed datasets.
>
> This may be a silly ques
example from earlier longer records. How does the poor function
know
>that your data do not bend down logistic-like after you last value?
>
>
>Dieter
Alex Karner ucdavis.edu> writes:
> I'm trying to (1) plot loess lines for each of my groupings using the
same
> color for
Hi R community,
I'm running R 2.7.2 on Windows XP SP2.
I'm trying to (1) plot loess lines for each of my groupings using the same
color for each group; (2) plot loess predicted values.
The first part is easy:
data1 <-
data.frame(Names=c(rep("Jon",9),rep("Karl",9)),Measurements=c(2,4,16,25,36,4
R friends,
I'm running R 2.7.2 on Windows XP SP2.
I have some data that's amenable to smoothing, and some that's not. I'm
trying to plot smoothed lines for the former along with just points for the
latter in a single panel. The problem comes when trying to break out the
points by group. My sample
upon
completion which implies that all of the axes are being drawn at once.
I think I'm misunderstanding something.
Thanks again,
-Alex
On Tue, Aug 26, 2008 at 6:02 PM, Deepayan Sarkar
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Aug 26, 2008 at 2:26 PM, Alex Karner <[EMAIL PROTEC
ants, so what I'd
ideally like to do is arbitrarily define two panels with different grouping
variables. I've tried to set up dummy groups and to condition on those, but
with no luck. I think what I need to do is possible with viewports, but is
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