On Thu, Dec 29, 2016 at 4:32 PM, Erich Subscriptions <
erich.s...@neuwirth.priv.at> wrote:
> Just a very brief footnote.
> I is easy to write badly structured spreadsheets.
> But if people dong this would not have spreadsheets
> and be forded to write code, they probably also
> would write badly s
Just a very brief footnote.
I is easy to write badly structured spreadsheets.
But if people dong this would not have spreadsheets
and be forded to write code, they probably also
would write badly structured code.
There is a lot of bad R code around also!
> On Dec 29, 2016, at 15:40, Bert Gunte
Oh nuts! I replied all. I apologize for the noise!
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, Dec 29, 2016 at 6:40 AM, Bert Gunter wro
(Private -- as this is just my personal opinion and not really helpful).
I found your comments informative. Thank you.
My own experience with scientific colleagues -- biologists mostly --
who use Excel in the way that you describe is that the "haptic" (great
word!) ease with which they manipulate
I don't really disagree with the below, but part of the issue is that analyses
do not typically output results in data frame like formats (neither in the
textual form or as R objects). Some people have attacked this issue by
wrangling output into data frames, check the "broom" package.
(The ide
Well, my few cents again.
the packages
openxslx and xlsx allow to write dataframes as Excel sheets.
(xlsx is Java based, so it has more requirements to run than openxlsx,
which is just C++ based)
On Windows, R tools for Visual Studio allows Excel export.
For Windows, there also is our Excel add-in
Hi Rolf,
I wanted to export the output/results of R to an Excel file for easier
comparisons/reporting. When I tried to copy and paste my output to an excel
file the formatting was off.
I want to export my descriptive stats and the linear regression.
I googled “Export R output to excel” but did
On 29/12/16 12:48, Bryan Mac wrote:
Hi Rolf,
I wanted to export the output/results of R to an Excel file for
easier comparisons/reporting. When I tried to copy and paste my
output to an excel file the formatting was off. I want to export my
descriptive stats and the linear regression.
This mak
On 29/12/16 10:45, Bryan Mac wrote:
Hi,
How do I export results from R to Excel in a format-friendly way? For
example, when I copy and paste my results into excel, the formatting
is messed up.
Short answer: *Don't*. ("Friends don't let friends use excel for
statistics.")
Longer answer:
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