alessandro == alessandro ambrosi [EMAIL PROTECTED]
on Sun, 05 Oct 2003 22:53:37 +0200 writes:
alessandro Hi all!
alessandro I have a simple question and I hope someone can
alessandro give me some hints. I have to fit a constrained
alessandro nonparametric model. More
I have been strugling to get character data in and out of c functions
using the .Call() interface, but I don't succeed getting them back
into R.
The example:
#include R.h
#include Rdefines.h
char *cp = xxx;
SEXP do_char(SEXP c) {
int i;
SEXP s;
for (i = 0; i LENGTH(c); i++)
I'm trying to automate making a bunch of figures and I need a way to
automate legend position. As I understand it the legend is
placed based
on coordinates. I don't know before hand what the
coordinates are going
to be. On one graph my y axis might go from -50 to -10.
On
In the example below:
library(lattice)
n = 100
a = rnorm(n)
b = rnorm(n)
c = sample(c(1:7), n, repl=TRUE)
xyplot(a ~ b, groups = c, auto.key = TRUE)
c = sample(c(1:8), n, repl=TRUE)
xyplot(a ~ b, groups = c, auto.key = TRUE)
a key is drawn for the first, but not for the
second graph. I suppose it
The Jonckheere-Terpstra test is a distribution-free test for ordered
alternatives in a one-way layout. More specifically, assume
X_ij = m + t_j + e_ij, i=1,...,n_j and j=1,...,k,
where the errors are idependent and identically distributed. Then you
can use the Jonckheere-Terpstra to
Dear R-users
I got some matlab code (just a few lines) for the deconvolution of a
signal:
function q=Dconvolve(funct)
w=squeeze(size(funct)); % gets the length
t=0:3:(w(1,1)-1)*3;
h=Dehemo(t,1.25,3);
r=fft(h);
rinv = 1./r;
q = real(ifft( fft(funct(:)).*rinv(:)));
Crispin -
This is a familiar problem. The only way I know of to do it is:
result - lapply(seq(along=list.a), function(i,a,b) do.it(a[[i]], b[[i]]), list.a,
list.b)
Here, do.it() is the function which operates on two elements.
I use this construction frequently.
- tom blackwell - u
On 06-Oct-03 Kim Mouridsen wrote:
The Jonckheere-Terpstra test is a distribution-free test for ordered
alternatives in a one-way layout. More specifically, assume
X_ij = m + t_j + e_ij,i=1,...,n_j and j=1,...,k,
where the errors are idependent and identically distributed.
Smart!
Thanks
Crispin
-Original Message-
From: Berwin Turlach [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 06 October 2003 13:11
To: Crispin Miller
Subject: Re: [R] Apply and its friends
CM == Crispin Miller [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
CM Hi,
CM Forgive a very basic question...
Karim -
try function gam() in package mgcv.
library(mgcv)
help(gam)
- tom blackwell - u michigan medical school - ann arbor -
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Karim Elsawy wrote:
I would like to fit a function H = F(x,y,z) but I do not know the
analytical expression
of H, is there a way to
As of a recent version (1.7.1?), see ?mapply
Ben
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Thomas W Blackwell wrote:
Crispin -
This is a familiar problem. The only way I know of to do it is:
result - lapply(seq(along=list.a), function(i,a,b) do.it(a[[i]], b[[i]]), list.a,
list.b)
Here, do.it()
Or even mars() in the mda package...
Andy
From: Thomas W Blackwell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Karim -
try function gam() in package mgcv.
library(mgcv)
help(gam)
- tom blackwell - u michigan medical school - ann arbor -
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Karim Elsawy wrote:
I
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Crispin Miller wrote:
Hi, Forgive a very basic question... I need to take two lists-of-lists,
and apply a function to each pair of elements in the lists to return a
single list... For example
l1 - list(1:5,6:10,2:15)
l2 - list(1:8,4:12,1:19,4:20)
I could easily do an
Dear colleagues,
I have performed the same analysis using the GLM
module of three statistical softwares: SYSTAT 10, JMP
4.0.2 and R 1.6.2 (see below for more details).
Although SYSTAT and R give roughly the same level of
significance for all variables, JMP yield a 20 percent
difference in
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, [iso-8859-1] Yves Claveau wrote:
Dear colleagues,
I have performed the same analysis using the GLM
module of three statistical softwares: SYSTAT 10, JMP
4.0.2 and R 1.6.2 (see below for more details).
Although SYSTAT and R give roughly the same level of
Dear All,
I think there is a typo in the documentation for coxph (library survival).
The help says:
eps: convergence threshold. Iteration will continue until the
relative change in the log-likelihood is less than eps.
Default is .0001.
However, if I do coxph.control() I
Dear R-users
I have a question about convolution, using the convolve() command:
the following code gives a function, which will be convolved with a
train of delta functions. Can anybody tell me, why the convolved
function doesn't have the same length as the original train of delta
functions?
tau
Dear List:
I have a data set with over 7000 students with about 4 observations over time per
student. I want to examine the within-group fits of a random sample of this group as
it takes forever to compute and draw all 7000 regressions.
Here is the code I have used so far.
Hello,
is there any documentation on doing principal components analysis with R
besides the R manual itself which is not very informative
Thank you
Ann
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https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
Dear Harold,
There are examples of sampling and plotting hierarchical and longitudinal
data in this manner in the appendix on mixed models to my R and S-PLUS
Companion to Applied Regression; the appendix is available at
Ann -
Some useful references are given in the help for each function.
Please DO READ the help.
- tom blackwell - u michigan medical school - ann arbor -
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Ann Devitt wrote:
Hello,
is there any documentation on doing principal components analysis with R
besides the R
Ann Devitt wrote:
Hello,
is there any documentation on doing principal components analysis with R
besides the R manual itself which is not very informative
Thank you
Ann
Have a look into the References given in ?prcomp and ?princomp.
Uwe Ligges
__
Ann Devitt schrieb:
Hello,
is there any documentation on doing principal components analysis with R
besides the R manual itself which is not very informative
yes, see the reference cited on the princomp() - help page:
Venables, W. N. and B. D. Ripley (2002). Modern Applied Statistics with
S,
Thanks Paulo
Option 1 seems to work nicely, but I'm not sure how to specify the
likelihood function so that I can calculate AIC for comparison with models
fitted with likfit?
David
At 12:24 01/10/2003 +0200, you wrote:
David
Indeed, the trend term in geoR must be a linear one.
You can:
1)
Dear R-help list,
I have a problem with the tick marks of a Kaplan-Meier survival plot.
Here is a sample:
follow.up-c(10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80,90,100) #months
dead-c(1,1,1,0,1,1,0,0,0,0)
KM -survfit(Surv(follow.up, dead))
plot(KM)
The result is a nice plot. However, our research group thinks it
Jason == Jason Turner [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Cliff Lunneborg wrote:
The following query raises the question: What is it that
students learn from point and click dialogs?
[...]
I will state one thing - the point and click interface
*can* teach about the underlying
(Didn't I show this at the workshop you attended in June?)
You want to sample the levels of childid and subset the group
accordingly.
samp - sample(levels(group$childid), 100)
subgroup - subset(group, childid %in% samp)
You could, if you want, combine these into
subgroup - subset(group,
Gabor Borgulya wrote:
Dear R-help list,
I have a problem with the tick marks of a Kaplan-Meier survival plot.
Here is a sample:
follow.up-c(10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80,90,100) #months
dead-c(1,1,1,0,1,1,0,0,0,0)
KM -survfit(Surv(follow.up, dead))
plot(KM)
The result is a nice plot. However, our
On Mon, 2003-10-06 at 10:55, Gabor Borgulya wrote:
Dear R-help list,
I have a problem with the tick marks of a Kaplan-Meier survival plot.
Here is a sample:
follow.up-c(10,20,30,40,50,60,70,80,90,100) #months
dead-c(1,1,1,0,1,1,0,0,0,0)
KM -survfit(Surv(follow.up, dead))
plot(KM)
The
Hopefully, someone who knows will answer. In case that won't happen,
I'll tell you what I would do that would likely produce the desired
result fairly quickly -- but longer than it would take me to test it:
1. class(KM) = survfit.
2. methods(plot) includes plot.survfit.
3.
Hi,
I am having some problems on installing bioconductor packages. I got 7
warnings and those 7 packages were not compiled correctly. I installed
Graphviz by using RPM, but not sure about HDF (I downloaded it and did
what doc says I should do but rhdf5 could not find it). I am running R
1.7.1 on
On Monday 06 October 2003 03:19, Edzer J. Pebesma wrote:
In the example below:
library(lattice)
n = 100
a = rnorm(n)
b = rnorm(n)
c = sample(c(1:7), n, repl=TRUE)
xyplot(a ~ b, groups = c, auto.key = TRUE)
c = sample(c(1:8), n, repl=TRUE)
xyplot(a ~ b, groups = c, auto.key = TRUE)
a
Dear List,
I have a couple of (~200) 3x3 transition probability matrices (ie each
defines a Markov chain). They are all estimated from the same
underlying process, so it ie meaningful to take their elemetwise mean
and standard deviation. [1]
First question: supposing that they are given in a
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Tamas Papp wrote:
I have a couple of (~200) 3x3 transition probability matrices (ie each
defines a Markov chain). They are all estimated from the same
underlying process, so it ie meaningful to take their elemetwise mean
and standard deviation. [1]
First question:
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Spencer Graves wrote:
Hopefully, someone who knows will answer. In case that won't happen,
I'll tell you what I would do that would likely produce the desired
result fairly quickly -- but longer than it would take me to test it:
1. class(KM) = survfit.
2.
Long ago (Sat, 2 Nov 2002), Bill Hart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
An R newbie here. I am using R 1.6 currently and have
(successfully, I think) installed the Foreign package.
Tried to import a data file created with Stata 7.0
SE. Had minor problems with syntax then R decided
that my file
Dear all,
Could any one tell me how the output relative error (in CP table) is
defined in rpart() in the classification case? Thank you.
Regards,
Ji
~~
Ji Zhu 439 West Hall
Assistant Professor 550 East
Hi,
I've been generating linear models with lm(). I wanted to look at the
VIF's for the coefficient. Using the vif() function from the package
Design, I would get unusually high VIF's.
However using vif() from the car package I get more reasonable values
(ie in line with the quality of the
The rimage install can't find the ffw header. Any idea why?
Rick B.
install.packages(rimage)
trying URL `http://cran.r-project.org/src/contrib/PACKAGES'
Content type `text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1' length 130159 bytes
opened URL
.. .. .. .. ..
..
Hi,
I wish to install R on my computer but I do not know how to do this. I have a Windows
ME.
Please advise on how to install R.
Thank you.
Stefanie
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
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Rick Bilonick [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The rimage install can't find the ffw header. Any idea why?
Because you haven't installed the fftw package for your Linux
distribution first?
Sources, .rpm and .deb files are at http://www.fftw.org/
Rick B.
install.packages(rimage)
trying URL
This is a question you should be able to answer from
the R web site, www.r-project.org.
- tom blackwell - u michigan medical school - ann arbor -
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Stefanie Chau wrote:
I wish to install R on my computer but I do not
know how to do this. I have a Windows ME.
Please
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Alan Cobo-Lewis wrote:
But sometimes older works better than newer. The read.dta() function in
R 1.7.0's foreign package (package 0.6-3) fails to recognize as a Stata
file what seems to be a genuine Stata file, even though R 1.6.2's
foreign package (package 0.5-9) imports
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Thomas Lumley wrote:
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Alan Cobo-Lewis wrote:
But sometimes older works better than newer. The read.dta() function in
R 1.7.0's foreign package (package 0.6-3) fails to recognize as a Stata
file what seems to be a genuine Stata file, even though R
Dear All
This is probably a very basic question for this list but I just wanted to
make sure that I am doing things right:
I have an LME model with 4 categorical variables and 2 continuous variables
(analysis of covariance model). I had to use a log transformation on the
data to achieve
To bring this back to be somewhat on topic for this list, my
point is that R has a well designed interface. It may not be all
things to all users, but it is really good for the users that are
willing to learn it. While there might be some more powerful
interfaces possible with a gui and a
I am trying to install R in Linux 8.0 and I downloaded
R-1.7.1-1.i386.rpm and did rpm -hiv R-1.7.1-1.i386.rpm
and I am getting the following message:
warning: R-1.7.1-1.i386.rpm: V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID
97d3544e
error: Failed dependencies:
libblas.so.3 is needed by R-1.7.1-1
Dear Rajarshi,
I don't have the book to which Frank Harrell refers in the documentation
for the vif function in the Design package, but looking at the code for the
function, I believe that there's an error:
vif -
function (fit)
{
v - Varcov(fit, regcoef.only = TRUE)
nam -
Javier Arsuaga [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I am trying to install R in Linux 8.0 and I downloaded
R-1.7.1-1.i386.rpm and did rpm -hiv R-1.7.1-1.i386.rpm
and I am getting the following message:
warning: R-1.7.1-1.i386.rpm: V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID
97d3544e
error: Failed dependencies:
Dear R folks -
Sorry to be so dense, but can you help me with two
programming problems?
1. Randomizing within factors.
I have factored the values in an array according to a series
of ranked breakpoints. Now I want to randomize the values that fall
within each of the
On Mon, 2003-10-06 at 18:00, Peter Dalgaard BSA wrote:
Javier Arsuaga [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I am trying to install R in Linux 8.0 and I downloaded
R-1.7.1-1.i386.rpm and did rpm -hiv R-1.7.1-1.i386.rpm
and I am getting the following message:
warning: R-1.7.1-1.i386.rpm: V3 DSA
I just found an old 1.6.2 (Mac OS/Darwin) lying around and it doesn't
recognize the file as a stata file (with foreign 0.5-8)
-thomas
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Thomas Lumley wrote:
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Thomas Lumley wrote:
On Mon, 6 Oct 2003, Alan Cobo-Lewis wrote:
But sometimes
2003-09-10, sze keltezssel David Khabie-Zeitoune ezt rta:
Have you tried win.metafile (I'm assuming you are using Windows)?
E.g.
win.metafile(file = c:/test.wmf)
plot(rnorm(100))
dev.off()
Hi!
I could not run this example:
Error: couldn't find function win.metafile
I am using Linux. Does
On Mon, 06 Oct 2003 18:42:04 -0400
John Fox [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear Rajarshi,
I don't have the book to which Frank Harrell refers in the documentation
for the vif function in the Design package, but looking at the code for the
function, I believe that there's an error:
vif -
Apologies for cross-posting.
As part of the CART 2004 Data Mining Conference, we have organized a
student competition focusing on the data mining technology of Leo
Breiman, Jerome Friedman, Richard Olshen, and Charles Stone (CART, MARS,
PRIM, and TreeNet/MART). We see this as an opportunity
On 07-Oct-03 Gabor Borgulya wrote:
I could not run this example:
Error: couldn't find function win.metafile
I am using Linux. Does this function only exist in the windows version
of R? Why? Does it need some functions of the OS itself? Can the Linux
version of R be invoked or compiled with
On Mon, 2003-10-06 at 19:21, Gabor Borgulya wrote:
2003-09-10, sze keltezssel David Khabie-Zeitoune ezt rta:
Have you tried win.metafile (I'm assuming you are using Windows)?
E.g.
win.metafile(file = c:/test.wmf)
plot(rnorm(100))
dev.off()
Hi!
I could not run this example:
Hello R experts,
I trust I have a simple request. I have a dataframe which among its contents are two
variables, qs2 and qs9, which have the following frequencies.
table(qs2)
qs2
1 2 3 4
40 22 11 29
table(qs9)
qs9
1 2 3 4
162 172 91 179
I simply want to create a new
This is a long way; i.e., not necessarily efficient:
qs2
[1] 2 1 1 4 4 4 1 1 1 4 2 4 3 1 4 3 3 2 4 3
qs9
[1] 4 4 1 3 4 3 1 3 1 4 1 2 3 3 4 4 1 4 2 3
decision - function(a, b) {
+ if (a == 1 || b == 1) return(1)
+ if (a == 2 || b == 2) return(2)
+ if (a == 3 || b == 3) return(3)
+
Hello all,
I'm using R1.7.1 on Linux, generating sammon-optimized MDS plots from
distance matrices. This is a calculation I run routinely, often on
sample sets of up to 100 samples. This time, with three samples, the
sammon function returned an error (shown below), which I tracked down to
the
Something I see fairly often in R code is heavy use of 'return',
like this example today:
decision - function(a, b) {
+ if (a == 1 || b == 1) return(1)
+ if (a == 2 || b == 2) return(2)
+ if (a == 3 || b == 3) return(3)
+ if (a == 4 || b ==
Hi all,
I wondered if anyone had used automatic differentiation libraries (e.g
ADIC/ADOL etc.) in conjunction with R? I have a C shared library that
calculates a likelihood within a wrapper function that gets minimized by
optim. This works OK but it would be nice to also have a function that
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