I actually had Numeric under WinXP also, manually installed it and could
import Numeric so that wasn't it imho.
On 1/11/07, Hugo González Monteverde <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Geoframer wrote:
>
> However i switched to Ubuntu 6.10 today (from WinXP) and to my suprise
> it does work under linux!
Geoframer wrote:
>
> However i switched to Ubuntu 6.10 today (from WinXP) and to my suprise
> it does work under linux! :-)
Probably Numeric is included in Ubuntu's Python distro.
Hugo
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Hey Kent,
Well i've gotten exactly no response on the Rpy-list on both my questions
:-(.
However i switched to Ubuntu 6.10 today (from WinXP) and to my suprise it
does work under linux! :-)
RHOME= /usr/lib/R
RVERSION= 2.3.1
RVER= 2031
RUSER= /home/geofram
Loading Rpy version 2031 .. Done.
Creat
Geoframer wrote:
> As i stated i think the conversion from Python to R is going wrong, but
> i have no clue on how to properly address that.
I agree. If you have Numeric installed (which I do) then r.diag() should
return a Numeric array, not a list of lists. This looks like the same
problem di
Thanks Kent that helps some, at least i can do the basic stuff i can do in R
now.
But you kinda hit the nail on the head with your statement "This seems to
work, it keeps a in the internal R representation instead
of converting it to a list of lists" This all started with me trying to get
R to do
Geoframer wrote:
> R is a statistical language and Rpy is the python interface for it.
> However somehow I'm failing to see a step in the python code with which I
> address the R language.
>
> in R I can do :
>
> a=diag(10) #produces an identity matrix of
> size 10
Okay this might not be the best place to post my question, but on the
rpy-list i'm getting no response and i'm really stuck with this problem.
Perhaps anyone on here has run into the same problem... I'm thinking my
newbieness to python probably is one of the reasons why i fail to see
what i'm doin