@Paul, hehe, Allen R. recommended me the ASDAR book. Funny thing is that I have an autographed version of the book. Edzer told me that this is the first book he had signed. :)
quick query, for the set.seed() function, is it possible to start at a particular value (say 100) and then have increase the value by one each time a process if repeated?
What I would do is create a vector of values you want to pass to RNG and after each replicate, remove the values from the vector. I would be passing the values to RNG from left to right and then NULL-ing the values already used.
Write a function that uses a closure to count how many times the function itself was called. Then use the output of that function as input to set.seed().
I must obviously be doing it wrong. stackoverflow.com/questions/12208250/… a comment from my friend DWin and magically a number of +1 for other answers :).
frankly given the nature of the question I thought gsubfn was a natural fit especial if one extended the situation. Still the man has many Internets so it must be me.
but lets say i have a whole host of vectors in my code, coupled with a for function in the middle of it, and i want to run this code with a different seed for say 40 iterations. Whats the best approach in this situation?
I can't envision your entire workflow from the information you've provided, but feel free to detail your problem in a question. Others might have better (different) suggestions.
@ttmaccer Well there is no need to use any additional packages here, especially one with the none standard interface of fn$grepl(). Ordinary grepl() works fine and the OP didn't really need anything complicated. You should at least update your accepted Answer to match what the OP wanted - it gives the right answer to the wrong question (although the OP didn't really say what the right answer was until their comment)
Only trying to explain why DWin might have commented as he did.
@ttmaccer Or was your posting here rhetorical...?
@ttmaccer And DWin's comment is spot on. gsubfn is really useful but not needed for something as simple as the OPs problem. Don't take these things too seriously...
@ttmaccer It may just be me, but I detect some sarcasm directed towards @GavinSimpson. I don't think that's justified, either in this case, or in general.
@ttmaccer Not sure what I've said is "elitist". You seem put out people haven't upvoted your answer more and that DWin dared to comment on your Answer?
@ttmaccer What, because you don't get up-voted enough!? Christ, you should look at some of my answers; lots of effort put in, etc but few votes. I'm not in here bleating about it though. The point of SO is not about you or I gathering the largest rep, it is about creating the best programming resource.
One thing I have seen, though, is that simple solutions seem to get higher scores. Where simple isn't easy to define. Elegant base R solutions qualify as simple, and sometimes solutions using packages that are easy to use also qualify as simple.
@ttmaccer OK, I've examined it. What should I see?
@ttmaccer Why haven't you downvoted that Answer (I know you haven't as I can see no-one has). You also seem to have deleted two of your own answers. If you have a solution post it so people can upvote it.
Ladies and Gentlemen, I suggest "Godwin's new law": No public discussion of R is complete until someone mentions something from Hadley (or one of his fanboys / disciples).
@ttmaccer This isn't a popularity contest. If you have a better Answer, post (or undelete) it so we can upvote it and thus provide a better Answer to the Question.
Well chaps lets not dig into this further. It doesnt really get us anywhere. I do my best to provide answers that are useful. If people dont like my methods all well and good. Apologies to all I may have insulted.
Hi @YesSure. Just wanted to clear up some confusion from the other day. optimx will load several packages if they are installed. If they are not installed, it will just give a warning (and a different answer). That is not standard behavior in R functions which is what made it difficult to figure out why your code wasn't reproducible for me even though it worked for you in a clean session.
and since it does this for a lot of packages, you end up with a lot of warnings which means they don't appear unless you type warnings()
yes im aware if that now so will provide all info in future. managed to answer the question i was asking myself last night so have a nice tidy loop now. outstanding issue i have now is figuring out how to replicate the entire thing with a different particular seed each time. such fun
@ttmaccer It was my rephrasing the bible (which I have not read, so I may be misquoting someone), and by that I meant that we're willing to help those who are willing to take the necessary steps.
Must admit to struggling to see what the problem is here. For the example stated nothing more than
R> namez <- c("foo2003", "bar2340", "naught45")
R> patternz <- "03"
R> grepl(patternz, namez)
[1] TRUE FALSE FALSE
is required as patternz is a character vector and the aim is not...
read the comments
no need for this petty crap. go bother someone else.
@ttmaccer Given that my contributions here reflect my own personal opinions and not those of my employer etc etc, I really don't care and neither do my employers. Universities are good like that.
@GSee hate to be a pain but I would respect if you removed acknowledgements to this answer from your package. Thanks. You seem like a decent chap but alot of those you associate with I would prefer not too. Hope you understand. — ttmaccer2 mins ago
Seriously. We all have bad days. Take a walk and a deep breath.
Keep an eye out to see if they delete any more answers, for signs of a rage quit. We don't want them to remove all their content. IMHO that answer should be undeleted.
@Andrie Good point, I should have figured that would be tracked.
@GSee Yes, people can be put in a "penalty box" for varying amounts of time, or in extreme cases removed completely. But it's pretty rare, and I doubt this rises to that level.
How do you pronounce this "left arrow" combination of less than and dash? You can use it for assignment in R instead of =, and I don't know how to say out loud "Use <- instead of equals".
@GavinSimpson I explain my choice of solution in a comment on the main post. Creating the regex within the variable rather than around it is way more elegant than any of the other solutions. Thanks for your input!
@GavinSimpson haha, I actually take his point. I don't mind requiring stuff if that will make up for readability. That's why we're using R instead of Fortran, isn't it?
@DanielMachado Well exactly, though I don't want to go over old ground as all I was doing in here earlier was explaining why DWin suggested gsubfn was overkill. None of that changes the validity of the Answer provided so for the life of me I don't know why it was downvoted.
@GavinSimpson Dwin was a bit short there, and did not make clear why he wasn't happy with the solution. I would be a bit burnt with that sort of comment. Actually, I was, as Dwin did downvote another post of mine and just commented on how bad it was while I was still working on both the solution and editing the question for clarity. Sometimes the question becomes clearer as we approach the solution, not before that.
@DanielMachado I didn't think DWin was being short, just acknowledging the overkill. Which is a valid comment. The other answers were close and did use grepl() so I guess he saw no reason to add another Answer at the time. Most of the time I give people benefit of doubt on the interweb; very difficult to be misunderstood etc, and I doubt DWin meant to be short (in this specific case)
@GavinSimpson Sure DWin did not mean harm, but he wasn't as thorough in his comment to avoid misinterpretation. Can't do that online, unless you use an emoticon to hint your intentions. ;7) Ok, end of rant. {^_^}
R is an open source programming language and software environment for statistical computing and graphics. The R language is widely used among statisticians for developing statistical software and data analysis.
R is an implementation of the S programming language combined with lexical scoping semantics inspired by Scheme. S was created by John Chambers while at Bell Labs. R was created by Ross Ihaka and Robert Gentleman at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, and now, R is developed by the R Development Core Team, of which Chambers is a member. R is named partly after the first names...