jw.he...@gmail.com writes:
> For simple exploration, you might have a look at ggobi? [1] It allows
> you to do some really quick/easy exploration by plotting and being
> able to check which variables to use for X and Y, coloring, filtering,
> changing plot type, and so on. There's an R package whi
On Fri, Sep 27, 2013 at 3:18 AM, Alan Schmitt
wrote:
> Hello,
>
> This question is slightly off-topic, but it may be of interest to people
> who have a lot of data entered in org-mode.
>
> The short version: what tools are available to explore data, typically
> stored in org-mode tables?
[snip]
Alan Schmitt writes:
> Hello,
>
> This question is slightly off-topic, but it may be of interest to people
> who have a lot of data entered in org-mode.
>
> The short version: what tools are available to explore data, typically
> stored in org-mode tables?
>
> The long version: I've tried an inte
* Alan Schmitt wrote:
> Hello,
Hi Alan!
> The short version: what tools are available to explore data, typically
> stored in org-mode tables?
Great question!
I did some very basic R-scripts to derive boxplots by myself.
> The long version: I've tried an interesting website
> (https://tictrac.
Dnia 2013-09-27, o godz. 10:18:15
Alan Schmitt napisaĆ(a):
> Hello,
>
> This question is slightly off-topic, but it may be of interest to
> people who have a lot of data entered in org-mode.
>
> The short version: what tools are available to explore data, typically
> stored in org-mode tables?
Hello,
This question is slightly off-topic, but it may be of interest to people
who have a lot of data entered in org-mode.
The short version: what tools are available to explore data, typically
stored in org-mode tables?
The long version: I've tried an interesting website
(https://tictrac.com/)