On Oct 12, 2011, at 3:16 PM, Veerappa Chetty wrote:
Hi,
When I import an excel "CSV" file, large numbers such as "
43988014.3" is
imported as "43988014", leaving out the decimal ".4". How to import
keeping
the fraction?
"Import from Excel" is a vague problem statement. It's also kind of
Well that's different. Can you restart R and get the same error
message? If so, change print() to print.default() to get around the
class error for now.
And I just want to make sure of one thing: you did actually change
"valueFromImport" to whatever you named the output of the read.csv()
call, rig
Are you sure its being imported into R without the decimal and that
it's not just a print option? I can't off the cuff think of a reason
why that would happen...
Try print(valueFromImport - 43988014) and see what you get
Michael
On Wed, Oct 12, 2011 at 3:16 PM, Veerappa Chetty wrote:
> Hi,
> Wh
Hi,
When I import an excel "CSV" file, large numbers such as " 43988014.3" is
imported as "43988014", leaving out the decimal ".4". How to import keeping
the fraction?
Thanks.
Chetty
--
Professor of Family Medicine
Boston University
Tel: 617-414-6221, Fax:617-414-3345
emails: chett...@gmail.com,v
Le dimanche 07 juin 2009 à 02:50 +0900, lucero mariani a écrit :
> Dear All,
> We aim to remove the spatial structure of our data using Moran Eigen
> Vectors and spdep package . Our data has 3694 samples and 13
> variables.
> The computer stop working after almost 4 days of processing (we found
> i
Dear All,
We aim to remove the spatial structure of our data using Moran Eigen
Vectors and spdep package . Our data has 3694 samples and 13
variables.
The computer stop working after almost 4 days of processing (we found
it emitting a sharp sound and with all colors on the screen. No
wories, it was
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