I use the ACF and PACF functions as part of my investigations into
autocorrelation ...
Is there any way of getting R to show the numerical values provided by
these functions?
TIA
Duncan
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
__
Thank you, Rolf.
I am aware of how to open and read the help files, I searched the web, too.
However, as a not so blessed user of R, I don't always understand what I
read.
I will do my best with your advice.
Duncan
On Sat, 21 Nov 2020, 10:57 Rolf Turner, wrote:
>
> On Sat, 21 Nov 2020
On Sat, 21 Nov 2020 08:36:45 +0700
Duncan Williamson wrote:
> I use the ACF and PACF functions as part of my investigations into
> autocorrelation ...
>
> Is there any way of getting R to show the numerical values provided by
> these functions?
Of course. Easy-peasy. E.g.:
set.seed(42)
x
On Sun, 15 Nov 2020 17:35:41 -0900
Lainey Gallenberg wrote:
Lainey,
Assumptions are always fraught. Your assumption about the "meaning" of
Indian Red is simply wrong. Indian red is named for a lateritic soil in
India. It isn't racist, and I have American Indian friends who have
expressed
>name since it conveys the wrong indication of its purpose. But the
>word 'racist' in itself is not offensive. The act of being racist is
>offensive and wrong. Purging the word 'racist' won't help rid the
>world of racism.
Indeed, if you would go down this road, where does it stop? You
The fact that for the first time we have so many messages in this group is
proof that the question asked by Lainey is appropriate and necessary.
No language is static, they evolve thanks to discussions like this.
Remember that github stopped using the term "master" to describe the main
branch of
On Thu, 19 Nov 2020 23:27:29 +0100
Heinz Tuechler wrote:
> One may remember that people who might feel offended by "Indian Red"
> (Native Americans) make up less than 0.5 percent of all "Indians".
> It is hardly the fault of the people of India that Native Americans
> were called Indians by an
On 18/11/2020 3:38 p.m., Duncan Murdoch wrote:
On 17/11/2020 12:43 p.m., C W wrote:
Dear R list,
I am an old-school R user. I use apply(), with(), and which() in base
package instead of filter(), select(), separate() in Tidyverse. The idea of
pipeline (i.e. %>%) my code was foreign to me for a
Looks like they do better than us in some aspects.
On Friday, November 20, 2020, Marc Roos wrote:
>
> > Remember that github stopped using the term "master" to describe the
> main branch of a repository for example.
>
> Github is some sort of national language institute, with a board of
>
Here’s a daft idea that brings it back to R
For packages where there are problematic names, have aliases with
acceptable names.
Perhaps create a package to hold all those aliases.
Then if a user wants their preferred names, load up the aliasing package
and change them in bulk. Using a package
> Remember that github stopped using the term "master" to describe the
main branch of a repository for example.
Github is some sort of national language institute, with a board of
literary, sociology, psychology professors?
Afaik is github owned by Microsoft, and Microsoft is known to be
And how would that relevant?
>
>Looks like they do better than us in some aspects.
>
>
>
>>
>> > Remember that github stopped using the term "master" to describe
>> > the
>> main branch of a repository for example.
>>
>> Github is some sort of national language institute, with a
FWIW,
There is also Naples Yellow and other colors related to "place names" on
artist palettes. "Indian Red" is not related to North American Native
peoples.
"/India Red/: Originally a natural, more purple iron oxide imported from
/India/. First synthesized in the 18th century as a “Mars”
Could we please stop this thread here? Please take any further discussions
off-list, or we would need an R-chat list for these kind of discussions (I
would subscribe, though).
Cheers,
Rainer
> On 20 Nov 2020, at 11:28, Charles Novaes de Santana
> wrote:
>
> The fact that for the first
Let’s switch to the German name - “Indisch Rot” instead...
> On 20 Nov 2020, at 12:08, Neotropical bat risk assessments and acoustic tools
> wrote:
>
> FWIW,
>
> There is also Naples Yellow and other colors related to "place names" on
> artist palettes. "Indian Red" is not related to North
Dear R-help listers,
The Statistical Computing Section of the American Statistical Association
announces the competition for the John M. Chambers Statistical Software Award.
In 1998 the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) presented the ACM
Software System Award to John Chambers for the
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