Hi
r-help-boun...@r-project.org napsal dne 12.04.2010 12:51:24:
>
>
> Petr Pikal wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > Nobody except you has your data available, so without providing more
clues
> > you can not expect mor relevant answers.
> >
> > Try str(your.objects) and maybe you could use debug to
Petr Pikal wrote:
>
>
> You did not tell much more about your data and procedures. Each object
> type has some distinct way of indexing and you can not mix them up.
>
> x<-1:10
>> x[5]
> [1] 5
>> x[[5]]
> [1] 5
>> x[5,]
> Error in x[5, ] : incorrect number of dimensions
>
>> x<-list(1:10)
>
Hi
r-help-boun...@r-project.org napsal dne 12.04.2010 07:14:14:
>
>
> David Winsemius wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> >>I am guessing that the first time through when i= 5200 that i+1 is
> >>indexing an entry that does not exist. What does str( Price[[1]]
> >>[5200+1] ) return? What about str(Ca)?
>
David Winsemius wrote:
>
>
>
>>I am guessing that the first time through when i= 5200 that i+1 is
>>indexing an entry that does not exist. What does str( Price[[1]]
>>[5200+1] ) return? What about str(Ca)?
>
>
>>So what is supposed to happen when you try "Ca[5200+1] <- "... anything?
>
>
On Apr 11, 2010, at 8:23 PM, ChinChin wrote:
Hi,
I am the first R user, I have met some problem and I am seeking for
help.
I am estimating the wealth of a shareholder.
First, I simulated 1 set of price, each set of price contains 5200
prices which reflect the price goes up and down th
Hi,
I am the first R user, I have met some problem and I am seeking for help.
I am estimating the wealth of a shareholder.
First, I simulated 1 set of price, each set of price contains 5200
prices which reflect the price goes up and down through out the year.
Price # consists of all set th
6 matches
Mail list logo