Hi,
I've recently taken over maintenance for the xtable package, and have
set it up on R-Forge. At the moment I'm pondering what the best way is
to handle submitted patches. Basically, is it better to:
1) Be non-restrictive regarding committer status, let individuals
change the code
Dear all,
Today I figured out that there is a neat function called droplevels,
which, well, drops unused levels in a data frame. I tried the function
with some of my data sets and it turned out that not only the unused
levels were dropped but also the contrasts I set via C. I had a look
into the
Le vendredi 21 octobre 2011 à 13:39 +0100, Charles Roosen a écrit :
Hi,
I've recently taken over maintenance for the xtable package, and have
set it up on R-Forge. At the moment I'm pondering what the best way is
to handle submitted patches. Basically, is it better to:
1) Be
Milan Bouchet-Valat nalimi...@club.fr wrote in message
news:1319202026.9174.6.camel@milan...
Le vendredi 21 octobre 2011 à 13:39 +0100, Charles Roosen a écrit :
Hi,
I've recently taken over maintenance for the xtable package, and have
set it up on R-Forge. At the moment I'm pondering what
To close this thread, this issue appears to have been solved in R
devel since at least r57339 (also confirmed with r57348).
/Henrik
On Sun, Oct 16, 2011 at 5:58 AM, Henrik Bengtsson h...@biostat.ucsf.edu wrote:
Hi.
On Wed, Oct 12, 2011 at 9:24 AM, Joshua Wiley jwiley.ps...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I'd encourage you to consider using github as the place for
development, and sync to r-forge so users can install the devel
version by install.packages(..., repos =
'http://r-forge.r-project.org') and r-forge can also do R CMD
build/check for you once in a while.
The reason to use github is
Hi,
I know you mentioned you just set this up on r-forge, but I think
using something like github works better in these types of
scenarios.
The ability for an external entity to clone a repository, change it,
provide the patch via a pull request I think is great.
You (as the project owner) can
Looke like Yihui and I are on the same page.
Just wanted to add another comment with respect to his point here:
I'd encourage you to consider using github as the place for
development, and sync to r-forge so users can install the devel
version by install.packages(..., repos =
Hi, Charles:
On 10/21/2011 7:54 AM, Steve Lianoglou wrote:
Looke like Yihui and I are on the same page.
Just wanted to add another comment with respect to his point here:
I'd encourage you to consider using github as the place for
development, and sync to r-forge so users can install the
I have had some fun in the last few days trying to put together an annotated
map of China with R and some public GIS data:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/outmodedbonsai/files/snpMatrix%20next/1.17.7.11/China_Choropleth_Maps.pdf/download
It is done, and rather nice... there are a few issues:
-
It was as easy as I thought it was half a day ago - here is a patch against R
trunk to add cairo support to the Sweave driver, an example Sweave input, and
the resulting output. A few more notes:
- obviously the documentation needs to be updated... a bit more work to do.
- some check to make
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