Bert:
My question implies that I read (consulted) the reference, as I cited
actual wordings of the reference.
Apparently, you think I am lazy, and dumb, and like to waste R-helpers'
time, as well as mine.
Thanks for your reply, quite helpful.
Bruce
~~
Bert Gunte
Dear David:
Thank you for your excellent reply.
Apparently, you are a in the know.
Again, thanks.
Bruce
__
Bruce Ratner PhD
The Significant Statistician™
(516) 791-3544
Statistical Predictive Analytics -- www.DMSTAT1.com
Machine-Learning Data Mining -- www.GenIQ.net
> On May 11,
> On May 11, 2017, at 6:31 AM, Bruce Ratner PhD wrote:
>
> Bert:
> Not clear to me.
> Where mentioned are the functions similar to glm, if you please?
The basis for the similarity was stated as having an available link function
(and I suspected, an inverse as well.) I, for one, wouldn't have
Bert:
Not clear to me.
Where mentioned are the functions similar to glm, if you please?
Bruce
__
> On May 11, 2017, at 8:39 AM, Bert Gunter wrote:
>
> ?glmulti seems clear enough to me. If not, pls check the reference given
> therein.
>
> Bert
>
>> On May 11, 2017 5:22 AM, "B
?glmulti seems clear enough to me. If not, pls check the reference given
therein.
Bert
On May 11, 2017 5:22 AM, "BR_email" wrote:
> Thanks, Bert. I would expect the list to include, at least lm. The
> reference states, "See Examples section."
> But, there is nothing in that section or elsewhere
Thanks, Bert. I would expect the list to include, at least lm. The
reference states, "See Examples section."
But, there is nothing in that section or elsewhere!!
Bruce
Bert Gunter wrote:
Probably? :
All functions for which a link function of the response is modeled as
a linear predictor of th
R-helpers:
In the "glmulti" package, it states parameter fitfunction assumes
functions similar to glm, but doesn't list them.
What are the functions similar to glm that can be used with glmulti?
Bruce
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