On Mon, May 12, 2008 at 10:34:40AM +1200, Rolf Turner wrote: > > On 12/05/2008, at 9:45 AM, Andrew Robinson wrote: > > >On Sun, May 11, 2008 at 07:52:50PM +0100, Federico Calboli wrote: > >> > >>The main point of my question is, having a 3 way anova (or ancova, if > >>you prefer), with *no* nesting, 2 fixed effects and 1 random effect, > >>why is it so boneheaded difficult to specify a bog standard fully > >>crossed model? I'm not talking about some rarified esoteric model > >>here, we're talking about stuff tought in a first year Biology Stats > >>course here[1]. > > > >That may be so, but I've never needed to use one. > > So what? This is still a standard, common, garden-variety > model that you will encounter in exercises in many (if not > all!) textbooks on experimental design and anova.
To reply in similar vein, so what? Why should R-core or the R community feel it necessary to reproduce every textbook example? How many times have *you* used such a model in real statistical work, Rolf? > >If it's bog-standard and yet boneheaded difficult, then presumably > >someone else would have had this problem before you. Perhaps a search > >of the archives will help? If you try, you will find many qualifiers > >to the effect that "lme isn't very well set up for crossed random > >effects". > > But that avoids the question as to *why* it isn't very well > set up for crossed random effects? What's the problem? > What are the issues? The model is indeed bog-standard. > It would seem not unreasonable to expect that it could be > fitted in a straightforward manner, and it is irritating to > find that it cannot be. If SAS and Minitab can do it at > the touch of a button, why can't R do it? Bates has made no secret of the fact that lme was intended first and foremost for nested designs, and that support for crossed designs is not promised. He has said so on many occasions, as a search would find. He is now working on lme4, which will support crossed designs. It's not done yet. > >and you show > >no evidence of having searched the R-help archives. How is that > >helpful? > > It doesn't seem to me to be a complaint as such. It is a > request for insight. I too would like some insight as to > what on earth is going on. And why do you say Federico > shows no evidence of having searched the archives? One can > search till one is blue in the face and come away no wiser > on this issue. At least one can know that there is an issue, which apparently Federico previously did not. Warm wishes Andrew -- Andrew Robinson Department of Mathematics and Statistics Tel: +61-3-8344-6410 University of Melbourne, VIC 3010 Australia Fax: +61-3-8344-4599 http://www.ms.unimelb.edu.au/~andrewpr http://blogs.mbs.edu/fishing-in-the-bay/ ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.