Dear Brian,
Thank you for your answer.
Another thing that came to my mind: Would it be possible just to separately
rank-transform my 3 dependent variables and then to conduct a normal MANOVA on
this data?
Thanks,
Mike
Eisenring Michael, Msc.
PhD Student
Federal Department of Economic Affairs,
Hello
This is my first time posting a question.
I am having trouble getting grepRaw() to match a fixed pattern at the
tail of a raw vector.
Here is an example:
# Returns integer(0), expected 2.
grepRaw(pattern = charToRaw('abcd'), x = charToRaw('0abcd'), fixed=T)
# Consequently, the pattern won
Thank you, your suggestions are very helpful. As I said, I'm a novice to R and
this list, and it's hard for me to decipher exactly what is required; I was
really hoping for some basic script formatting guidance (which was given and
appreciated).
Jake Andrae
PhD Candidate
Geology & Geophysics �
Off topic for this list.
Post on stats.stackexchange.com or similar for statistics questions.
Post on Bioconductor list for biology-related (e.g. proteomics) data
anaysis questions.
Cheers,
Bert
Bert Gunter
"The trouble with having an open mind is that people keep coming along
and sticking th
x <- 10
plot(1:10, main=bquote(R^2 * "=" * .(x)))
On Wed, Jan 18, 2017 at 8:00 PM, Richard M. Heiberger wrote:
> ?plotmath
>
>
> plot(1:10, main=expression(R^2))
>
> plot(1:10, main=bquote(R^2 * "=" * .(x)))
>
> On Wed, Jan 18, 2017 at 7:44 PM, Jake William Andrae
> wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>>
>> I'v
?plotmath
plot(1:10, main=expression(R^2))
plot(1:10, main=bquote(R^2 * "=" * .(x)))
On Wed, Jan 18, 2017 at 7:44 PM, Jake William Andrae
wrote:
> Hello,
>
>
> I've added some statistical information as text to some graphs, but I'm
> having a really hard time making the 2 in the R2 label supe
?plotmath
Yes, you will have to put in some effort if you want to use these
sorts of latex-like math expressions as labels in your graphs.
Cheers,
Bert
Bert Gunter
"The trouble with having an open mind is that people keep coming along
and sticking things into it."
-- Opus (aka Berkeley Breathe
Hello,
I've added some statistical information as text to some graphs, but I'm having
a really hard time making the 2 in the R2 label superscript. Does anyone have
any suggestions?
mtext(paste("R2 = ", R2), adj=0, line=1, col="black", cex=0.7)
Kind regards
Jake Andrae
PhD Candidate
Geolog
I'm working with proteomic data, helping a student who knows biology and
has done analysis in R without understanding it in depth.
We have 3000 protein levels for 6 ages. I can treat this as 6 vectors in
3000-dimensional space, diagonalize a 6x6 covariance matrix and find 5
principal components,
Hi Steve,
and thanks so much for taking the time to draft your solution! After
running through it looks like it's EXACTLY what I was looking/hoping
for!
For those interested: I also tried to get this in as a feature request
for the lubridate package >>
https://github.com/hadley/lubridate/issues/5
If you want to use purrr, you could do
fil <- paste0("data",2004:2014,".txt")
map_df(fil, read.table, .id = "fil")
to get everything in one data frame (I assume all files have the same
structure)
HTH
Ulrik
On Wed, 18 Jan 2017 at 16:10 PIKAL Petr wrote:
> Hi
>
> Let me make some assumptions. Y
You could try a multi-response permutation procedure (MRPP) for
multivariate hypothesis testing (null is groups come from a common
distribution) without resorting to ranks. There are no automated multiple
comparison procedures, but one could either look at pairwise contrasts of
group (if that is w
> On Jan 18, 2017, at 11:03 AM, John Sorkin wrote:
>
> Please forgive my resending this help request. I sent it two days ago. To
> date I have not received any responses.
> Thank you,
> John
>
>
> I am looking for a small computer low power that I make available on the web
> that will run R
Please forgive my resending this help request. I sent it two days ago. To date
I have not received any responses.
Thank you,
John
I am looking for a small computer low power that I make available on the web
that will run R studio server or R server
1) can anyone recommend a computer?
2) can
Good day,
I am looking for a way to perform a non parametric manova and to analyze the
result using post-hoc tests (an equivalent of the kruskal wallis test for anova)
In my book (discovering statistic using R) two tests are described Munzel and
Brunners method (mulrank) and Choi and Mardens tes
Hi
Let me make some assumptions. Your data are stored as *txt files somewhere.
I would start with vector of file names
fil<-paste0("data",2004:2014,".txt")
> fil
[1] "data2004.txt" "data2005.txt" "data2006.txt" "data2007.txt" "data2008.txt"
[6] "data2009.txt" "data2010.txt" "data2011.txt" "dat
Look up get and mget in the docs.
> On 18 Jan 2017, at 10:57, Brandon Payne wrote:
>
> I can't get my head around the *apply family of functions,
> surely there's a better way than what I have.
> I've tried using paste0 on the years, but then I have lists of strings, not
> data frames.
>
> `rea
I believe you need to convert them to a data frame before you can use
any data frame export functions to save them to disk. See ?as
I'm assuming that you are using the arules package; your question is incomplete.
I've never used arules myself; I googled "rhelp export apriori rules"
Sarah
On Wed
Hi Sir,
Need help in exporting R apriori rules to Excel. i tried write.csv
write.table write.csv2
only exporting less than 500 rules.
unable to export Large Data.
" No Error Msg" File size is "0"
--
*Edward *
--
--
*Regards * *:)*
*Edward Tamil.S *
[[alternative HTML vers
Dear R-Team,
i only want to smooth a time series with a Kalmen Filter in R (KFAS).
I found code in the Internet, which I had to change a little bit.
Now I get the following error-message. I don’t know what I have
to do now.
Fehler in is.SSModel(do.call(updatefn, args = c(list(inits, model),
u
I can't get my head around the *apply family of functions,
surely there's a better way than what I have.
I've tried using paste0 on the years, but then I have lists of strings, not
data frames.
`realList<-paste0("exp",as.character(2004:2014),"s")`
I can't seem to convert these lists of strings to
We would like to announce the following statistics course:
Course: Data exploration, regression, GLM & GAM with R
Where: HCMR, Crete, Greece
When: 24-28 April 2017
Course website: http://www.highstat.com/statscourse.htm
Course flyer: http://highstat.com/Courses/Flyers/Flyer2017_04Crete_RG
> -Original Message-
> (yw <- format(posix, "%Y-%V"))
> > # [1] "2015-52" "2015-53" "2016-53" "2016-01"
>
> Which, after checking back with a calendar, would give me reason to believe
> that it using %V does in fact seem to work: it's an input to `format()` and R
> doesn't seem to ignore
I am using R version 3.3.2 (64 bit) on ubuntu version 14. I am trying to
install Rweka but getting the following error.
Can someone please help me with this error ?
Regards
Parth
Error : .onLoad failed in loadNamespace() for 'rJava', details:
call: dyn.load(file, DLLpath = DLLpath, ...)
error
Hi Rolf,
About the only reason I would hesitate is package bloat. There are now
167 functions listed in the package. I posted the cut2matrix function
for the benefit of those who had been following the thread, but it
seems like a very peculiar way of displaying data. While I encourage
trying things
Hi Jake,
You could consider switching to ggplot2
# create a dummy dataset
dataset <- data.frame(
XA = rnorm(100),
XB = rnorm(100, mean = 10),
YA = rnorm(100),
YB = rnorm(100, mean = -10)
)
# convert it to long format
library(tidyr)
long <- dataset %>%
gather("Xcat", "Xvalue", XA:XB) %>%
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