Ah yes - thank you
-Original Message-
From: Jeff Newmiller
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2019 6:49 PM
To: r-help@r-project.org; reichm...@sbcglobal.net
Subject: Re: [R] Confusion Table
If you turn your character variable into a factor and specify the levels
argument, you can control
That's easy enough
Thanks
-Original Message-
From: Peter Langfelder
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2019 6:48 PM
To: reichm...@sbcglobal.net
Cc: r-help
Subject: Re: [R] Confusion Table
The lazy way is to do
tst_tab = tst_tab[c(2,1), c(2,1)]
The less lazy way is something
If you turn your character variable into a factor and specify the levels
argument, you can control the sequence in which any discrete values are
presented.
tst_pred <- factor( tst_pred, levels=c("No","Yes") )
On January 16, 2019 4:31:15 PM PST, reichm...@sbcglobal.net wrote:
>R-Help
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>R-H
The lazy way is to do
tst_tab = tst_tab[c(2,1), c(2,1)]
The less lazy way is something like
tst_tab <- table(predicted = factor(tst_pred, levels = c("Yes",
"No")), actual = factor(default_tst$default, levels = c("Yes",
"No")))
Peter
On Wed, Jan 16, 2019 at 4:39 PM wrote:
>
> R-Help
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> R
R-Help
R-Help community is there an simple straight forward way of changing my
confusion table output to list "Yes" before "No" rather than "No" before
"Yes" - R default.
# Making predictions on the test set.
tst_pred <- ifelse(predict(model_glm, newdata = default_tst, type =
"response")
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