@zx8754 I don't like the fact that if I custom flag a comment and then the user deletes it, the flag is marked "helpful". The problem is that a mod will never see it.
@DirtySockSniffer Then custom flag one post, explain the why and give links to others posts in this one, so the mod will have all informations at one place to check out and act accordingly ;)
thinking of rejecting the three open Docs proposals, not because they're bad, but just because in their current form they need some work... thoughts? stackoverflow.com/documentation/r
@Hack-R the question got so many downvotes because you linked it in your meta post. I am sure your upvote is well appreciated though. — mtoto1 hour ago
The funnies thing though, that the OP of this question still got a positive score on it (15*5)-(37*2) + 2 = 3
i use = more and more, don't see an upside for the arrow, unlike T vs TRUE. i almost always have a var named T these days (for size of a time interval), and often F too (a cdf)
i think those 95% of r users are not qualified to use if(length(test <- 3)) 1 or f <- function(x <- 2) 1 and can be protected from themselves by only using =, no?
to the extent that i have an opinion on one vs the other, that's what i see
anyway, the note's over here: stackoverflow.com/documentation/r/5410/… i think we should keep it to only stuff that we're unanimous about, which turns out to be almost nothing. markdown headers, i guess
anyway, i mean the note to serve as both a guide to editors and a heads up to reviewers that "no, don't clog up review with your trivial style prefs". i'm not convinced that the assignment ops thing rises above subjective style prefs, but since your edits don't have to go through review and i'm not about to edit-war you on it, go ahead
@DavidArenburg that doesn't bother me... anyway, i'll be teaching my colleagues with a doc mostly/all having =, since i don't see much benefit to the mental overhead and extra cost of translating code
Waiting for nurka to comment here something like "I had thought of this first but didn't post it, and since it has so many upvotes it is a biased voting ring."
@DavidArenburg yes, i guess it's been asked before, but i don't think the left/right/whatever target is good for this sort of thing
been asked, and been answered by me, too, i'm sure
DT[i, on, `:=`(cols)] might be my favorite thing about data.table syntax
i've got three instances of my answering that way, but they all required some sort of reshaping first, looks like. since i don't have an extensive vocab for this sort of thing, was calling it "merge assign" stackoverflow.com/search?q=user%3A1191259+%22merge-assign%22
@DavidArenburg there are a bajillion ways to do this, i guess, especially following the preface "assuming the data is all binary..." like unique(d[order(-x)], by="a")
or equivalently (-ish?) d[order(-x), .SD[1L], by=a]
maybe d[order(-x, 1:.N), .SD[1L], by=a] preserves order, dunno. i find it hard / unnecessarily hard to wrap my head around cases where people say row order matters but can't be bothered to have a variable capturing that dependence
@eddi since .SD[stuff] is not optimized and i see it warning against inefficiency when i have verbose=TRUE, maybe y'all should link to your .I+$V1 answer
re which.max, it's returning the first element to attain the max and is not a generic function with special treatment for logicals, i guess
ah right, ok, that makes sense then; re .I - too lazy - tired of writing the same thing over and over again - they can just google if they hit a speed issue :)