Hi all, Does anyone else encounter a lot of Stata users in their field? Are there good existing resources for teaching R to these folks, or would anyone be interested in helping me develop/curate them?
I'm an economist, and I'd say 80+% of our work (mine included) is in Stata. I've seen a few things along this line (Mostly Harmless Econometrics <https://github.com/vikjam/mostly-harmless-replication> in R, Stata, Python, and Julia, a quick dplyr guide <http://johnricco.github.io/2016/06/14/stata-dplyr/>) but no lesson. I've taught a couple workshops on reproducible research at the World Bank, and I know their big data/programming people would be happy if more of the researchers their learned R and its dynamic documents capabilities. Thanks, Garret -- Garret Christensen, PhD Assistant Project Scientist, Berkeley Initiative for Transparency in the Social Sciences <http://bitss.org> Data Science Fellow, Berkeley Institute for Data Science <http://bids.berkeley.edu>
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