@agstudy yes.. I do.. that's why the question.. so only way I could think of is to convert character data to factors then numbers and then convert dataframe to xts
@geektrader, it depends on the size of your data, factor are good beacuse you save memory, I think no need to use xts only for align.time ( which is incessantly , shifting the index by (n - .index(x)%%n)
stocktwits.com have there own sentiment analysis tool now i think
and there are number of startups working in that field
I think sentiment information can be taken at best as filters for signals generated from some other strategies .. as far as quantitative trading is concerned..
discretionary traders might have different opinion..
I update this question from my understanding of documentation in the net. So please if someone know Matlab( I used it long time ago) can correct me if I miss something.
It seems to be generally considered poor programming practise to use variable names that have functions in base R with the same name.
For example, it is tempting to write:
data <- data.frame(...)
df <- data.frame(...)
Now, the function data loads data sets while the function df comput...
I guess it sort of depends on where the functions you use regularly start their searching?
The question I've linked to has their own "mode", "cat", and "levels", which can be distracting, even if it didn't lead to errors. That said, the number of functions available with R makes it pretty hard to not overlap!
@Andrie I read your question. There is a simple argument forgotten by answers , is the visibility of code, for example if I call variable t, and transpose t , t(t), c(c), I think code looks ugly.
@sebastian-c, you were talking about a SO package--perhaps a set of different functions to generate data, like recent ones that @RicardoSaporta has been using would be useful. They can be categorized according to the type of datasets that they create. (wide, repeated measures, and so on)
@agstudy Where can I look? (I'm procrastinating on editing a report.)
Not necessarily notable, but taking the approach to sample data creation from here stackoverflow.com/a/15187498/1270695 and putting it into a basic function where you can expand both the number of rows and columns to try functions out on different sized datasets conveniently comes to mind.
I would still prefer if there were also other types of data in there--dummy variables, logical variables, variables with missing values, and so on.
I took his answer from here and used it here in the form of a function, but that was to address a specific question.
@sebastian-c, I see from Andrie's map that you are one among 10 Australians from Sydney in the top 1K on R. Do you know each other outside of SO too?
What is a bounty?
What is the "Featured" tab on the homepage?
How can I search for questions that have a bounty attached?
How do I start a bounty? When can I start a bounty?
How long is the bounty period?
How do I award a bounty?
Can I award a bounty to my own answer?
Can I award a bounty to an ...
I think that if the person who offers the bounty does not explicitly mark the bounty, then after 24 hours, if they have accepted an answer during the bounty period, that answer would also get the bounty.
@joran I was wondering the same thing. I could have made my answer hotter by cutting out some more intermediate steps, but I was afraid that SO would catch on fire.
Nothing wrong with the question at all (indeed, they provided a reproducible example and all) but there wasn't anything particularly interesting about it.
... so the trick is to add pictures into answer huh? Do any pictures work or do they have to be related to the question/answer? Can I find any plausible reason to add a picture of a kitty and then just expect the upvotes to come rolling in?
Oh happy day, happy day! Actual Tech fixed their Oracle ODBC driver! I can once again load XLConnect and connect to my Oracle db at the same time. Will wonders never cease...?