Hear, Hear. I seem to recall that I asked soemthing similar way back :-)-O
el In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Jeremy Gray writes: > Howdy! > > PSPP sounds like a great idea, I look forward to seeing it realized.=20 > I'm wondering if you folks have considered using R=20 > (http://www.r-project.org/) as the statistical engine of PSPP, with=20 > PSPP providing an SPSS-style user interface? this could potentially=20 > speed up development of pspp, in terms of providing stats, and could=20 > make R a lot more user friendly for people used to SPSS (e.g., most=20 > research psychologists). R has been adapted to be call-able from within=20= > > perl, for example, so I am pretty sure that what I am suggesting is=20 > feasible (no idea how easy, of course). R is widely respected, and has=20= > > a strong and active development base. > > just an idea, > > --Jeremy > > /*---------------------------------------------------------- > Jeremy R. Gray, PhD > Assistant Professor, Dept. of Psychology > Yale University =A0 > Box 208205 =A0 > New Haven, CT 06520-8205 USA > phone 203.432.9615 (office) > fax 203.432.7172 (include Attn J. Gray) > web http://pantheon.yale.edu/~scl39/ > ------------------------------------------------------------*/=20= > > > > _______________________________________________ > pspp-dev mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pspp-dev > _______________________________________________ pspp-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pspp-dev
