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2:52 AM
hi @DirkEddelbuettel - is this answer still valid (about packages using Rcpp not allowing a dot in the name): stackoverflow.com/a/20721178/5977215 ? - I'm asking because I'm building one such package and finding build errors on one Mac but not on another.
 
3:15 AM
@SymbolixAU AFAICR that has always been a C++ restriction: because the dot is used to separate members of a class (or struct) you cannot use it in identifiers.
 
Thanks @DirkEddelbuettel - I'll keep investigating :)
 
3:33 AM
Today's dose of choosing to punch yourself in the face for fun:
I highly recommend jumping straight to "What Is R?" for maximum effect!
 
@thelatemail That also wins the price for failing to correctly spell the name of a major US university: University of Michegen
Or are we typo-squatting universities now? Can I haz Harvad U and Stanfoot U, please?
 
@DirkEddelbuettel - I noticed that, but clearly the reviewers didn't. Put me down for one Cambrudge University.
 
 
4 hours later…
7:32 AM
@thelatemail that reads like it was written by an 8 year old
 
8:32 AM
@thelatemail Wow, installing packages can be time consuming. And this statement has a reference I dare not to visit.
 
@thelatemail Any article that considers Excel a valid option for statistics, should be burned on a stake!
That's was a bit too scary for a monday morning, in all honesty. My stomach made a little twist when I saw that.
 
Oh it's hilarious.
Check out this doosie! "They claim that the extensive programming required to code a report in R is quite a time investment, as “R does not have a defined way of producing reports” (Loomis Lofland & Ottesen, 2013, p. 3)."
 
 
1 hour later…
9:50 AM
@RomanLuštrik I've read the cited article. It has some interesting opinions: "The design of R was focused around statistical computing and graphics, so data management tends to be time consuming and not as clean as SAS" "SAS can manage and analyze big and messy data, whereas R is mostly centered around analysis."
 
10:39 AM
0
Q: When will R solve the speed issue?

Yifan LiuI have been using R for 3 years in my financial research, and find it really useful. It enables me to easily access data in WRDS, Quandl, and Bloomberg, and the statistics tools are very powerful, and the knitr package makes it so easy to write papers in LaTex format. Last year, I encountered...

kill it with fire!
 
11:13 AM
@thelatemail Or the line before: "With R, though, it is important to acknowledge that it cannot manage messy data as easily as other available statistical software." Somebody should send that paper to Hadley, so he can tiddlyverse the crap out of those authors :-)
 
11:48 AM
Looks like I've been missing out. The datasets I get are FUBAR, and I can't see how SAS could digest them.
Like coding for gender in 4 different ways, inconsistent coordinate formats, not to mention different level names.
But it would seem they thought of a way?
 
@RomanLuštrik PROC TIDY;
 
12:32 PM
@DirkEddelbuettel - FWIW yes, it's to do with the . in the package name, however, I didn't have this issue when building on R 3.2.2 (it built/installed/ran fine), but since upgrading to 3.4 it's now error-ing.
 
1:09 PM
@RomanLuštrik My nerd level is too high. I immediately thought "hmm, isn't that spelled foo.bar?"
 
 
4 hours later…
5:13 PM
But yeah, your version is much more readable...
I mean, its as simple as DATA$CONCAT=apply(DATA[,SELECT],1,paste,collapse="-"), isn't it? — Spacedman 2 hours ago
 
 
3 hours later…
7:57 PM
Sheesh, already have had two bad bike incidents today. Luckily (?) my bike is temporarily un-rideable for the rest of the day, so I guess I'm safe for now...?
 
8:12 PM
Maybe it's trying to kill you...
 
8:26 PM
@joran no damage to yourself?
 
@Spacedman Luckily, no. First wasn't my fault (inattentive driver), second was my fault (carelessly delayed maintenance on my rear fender).
@JoshuaUlrich I have enough problems without inanimate objects having it out for me.
 
8:46 PM
@thelatemail FWIW a lot of the R-negative conclusions are drawn (slightly out of context) from: Loomis Lofland C., Ottesen R. (2013). The SAS Versus R debate in industry and academia. Paper presented at the SAS Global Forum 2013, San Francisco, CA. pdfs.semanticscholar.org/e232/… . They do close with: "Using both technologies to leverage data manipulation and analysis seems like the winning solution for all."
 
9:14 PM
@Spacedman - do.call(paste, df) surely?
@BenBolker - that article is better and more even-handed, but as the quotes above show, is still essentially an opinion piece rather than a factual analysis. Which is fine, but that it was cited many times in an academic work without critique is a bit of a worry.
 
 
2 hours later…
11:09 PM
"[SAS] becomes less popular with greater educational attainment."
http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2017/06/burtch-works-survey-2017.html
 

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