and got it to communicate with R, that certain R packages
necessary for use of Tinn-R now get run every time I open Tinn-R (and R
opens with it.)]
That way, typing R on the command line (might!) run Rcmdr too.
--Chris
Christopher W. Ryan, MD
SUNY Upstate Medical University Clinical Campus at Binghamton
?
Thanks.
--
Christopher W. Ryan, MD
SUNY Upstate Medical University Clinical Campus at Binghamton
40 Arch Street, Johnson City, NY 13790
cryanatbinghamtondotedu
PGP public keys available at http://home.stny.rr.com/ryancw/
If you want to build a ship, don't drum up the men to gather wood,
divide
As a fellow beginner, I also found Handbook of Statistical Analyses
Using R, by Brian Everitt, to be a very useful book. There is an
accompanying R package, HSAUR.
Also Using R for Introductory Statistics, by John Verzani. There is an
accompanying R package, UsingR.
Christopher W. Ryan, MD
This sounds like a solution I've been looking for. With this setup now
in place, when you download and install some new packages, where will
they be put? Into C:\myRlib ?
Thanks.
--Chris
Christopher W. Ryan, MD
SUNY Upstate Medical University Clinical Campus at Binghamton
40 Arch Street
-0.043 0.002 0.158
But on page 169, summary() is shown to produce additional columns in the
fixed effects section, namely degrees of freedom and the P-value (with
significance stars).
How can I produce that output? Am I doing something wrong? Has lme4
changed?
Thanks.
--
Christopher W. Ryan