Conversation started Mar 10, 2013 at 16:41.
Mar 10, 2013 16:41
@juba, I like the books by "David A. Freedman". They are in general easy to follow with more theory.
If you want to begin even more theorretical, there's this "Intuitive biostatistics" amazon.com/…
It's good to give this book a read before starting with a more formal statistical book.
@Arun Ah, thanks, they seem nice. I'll keep these references.
I don't use Macs or have any friends who do. Does using Sys.info()[["sysname"]] always return "Darwin"? @Arun? @agstudy? Other Mac users.
@AnandaMahto It does so on mine
@Arun Thanks.
@AnandaMahto The same on mine
Mar 10, 2013 16:47
@AnandaMahto yes it does!
@juba, There's one other I wanted to read for a long time, but dint have the time. I forget the name.. I'll write again soon
Thanks, y'all.
@AnandaMahto, what's the deal with that?
To remind again, I think this is too localized.. any thoughts?
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Q: Returning an array in R

cobieIs it possible to return an array of values in R from a function call? I have a method which should store values from a computation in an array and returns it to the caller but in reality all it does is return the first element of the array. The function is given below. binsmooth_trials = functi...

@Arun Amin is giving me pressure to make my "read.so" function Mac friendly.
@AnandaMahto, ignore him :P
Mar 10, 2013 16:50
@juba I read this book a long time ago and enjoyed it. As far as I remember, it doesn't get very advanced, but I sometimes share it with students because I liked the way Tufte walked through thinking about some of the problems. No programming at all though.
@Arun :)
@AnandaMahto, of course! it's indeed an awesome read.
@AnandaMahto I've thought about reading Tufte's books for some time. But they are quite expensive.
@juba This one is free :)
@AnandaMahto
if (Sys.info()["sysname"] == "Darwin") {
read.table(pipe("pbpaste"), sep = sep, ...)
}
else {
read.table("clipboard", sep = sep, ...)
}
Mar 10, 2013 16:52
@agstudy Just fork it already :)
@AnandaMahto Arf, sorry, I thought it was one of his books about visualization :)
Thanks a lot for the link !
I don't know what they cost now, but back when I bought them Tufte's visualization books were very reasonable for what they were (elegantly produced hardcovers with lots of colour illustrations) -- did you know he mortgaged his house to self-publish them?
It's a little bit specific but Gelman and Hill's multi-level regression book is very nice.
@juba I love Tufte's books--got them all a while ago--but I find Stephen Few's books much more practical.
 
Conversation ended Mar 10, 2013 at 16:54.