Hi Ista,

Our material on statlib is far out of date. Please refer to the primary source at http://biostat.mc.vanderbilt.edu/StatReport

Thanks
Frank


Ista Zahn wrote:
Hi Paul,
For instructions and examples using the Hmisc latex() function you
might want to take a look at
http://lib.stat.cmu.edu/S/Harrell/doc/summary.pdf.

-Best,
Ista

On Wed, Mar 17, 2010 at 10:51 AM, Paul Miller <pjmiller...@yahoo.com> wrote:
Hello Everyone,

I have just started learning R and am in the process of figuring out what it 
can and can't do. I must say I am very impressed with R so far and am amazed 
that something this good can actually be free.

Recently, I finished reading R for SAS and SPSS Users and have begun reading 
SAS and R and Data Manipulation with R. Based on what I've read in these books 
and elsewhere, I get the impression that R is very good at drawing high quality 
graphs but maybe not so good at creating nice looking tables of the sort I'm 
used to getting through SAS ODS.

Am I right or wrong about this? If I am wrong, can anyone show me some examples 
of how R can be used to create really nice looking tables? I often make tables 
of adverse events in clinical trials that have n(%) values in the cells. I'd 
love to see an example that does a nice job of making that sort of table but 
would be happy to see any examples that someone might be willing to send to me.

Thanks,

Paul



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--
Frank E Harrell Jr   Professor and Chairman        School of Medicine
                     Department of Biostatistics   Vanderbilt University

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