@jeremycg good idea. i think i'll stick with this way for this project, though. my web-dev skills are not so great (i don't even understand git yet, much less jekyll; and would rather skip as much css tweaking as i can); this way is internally linked with LaTeX style @refs and a TOC and is portable, so i can just give my coworkers the generated folder; and i like that the files i'm working with are markdown and so (i figure) likely to still be fairly readable and compilable a decade from now
i might feel differently if/when i start using python for work though. the jupyter notebook seems pretty handy
@DavidArenburg or more general sum(10^(rev(seq(1:4))-1)*(1:4))
hello hello :-)
@DavidArenburg yep but still the guy is weird:
Thank you very much Professor for guidance. In the future, I'll have my eye on the formulation of the problem. I will use the definition of a structure: For example, Description, Exactly, Summary and specification of the problem in the end. Have a nice day Jan Ondreák student University - UCM, Trnava, Slovakia, Faculty of Natural Sciences. Department of Applied Informatics and Mathematics. Field of study Applied Informatics. You are a good man. — Jan Ondreak15 hours ago
@alistaire maybe you should flag for moderator attention ? certainly he induces a bias in voting... (btw what have you done to him to get him "upset" ? ;-) )
@ProcrastinatusMaximus if you come around, good luck for your first day on your new job !! :-)
@Cath I'm not all that concerned; it's pretty minor compared to serial downvoting or nasty comments. And I have no idea what I did, aside from post on the same questions he later posted on, but apparently I'm now a member of the cabal that meets once a year in an undisclosed location to decide who to vote for. ¯(º_o)/¯
I have a 2-dimensional dataset with 1,207,336 in the space [0,1]. I am aiming to visualize the density of the points. When plotting with geom_point I get the following
From this, it is very difficult to tell the density. I have tried using geom_raster() (without any parameters), but then I get...
But to give you an inch, region towards the sea does have dry summers and grass recedes. Only horses can live on that, which is why a famous stud farm was established in 1500s.
Moss is great, it requires zero maintenance and is very soft to walk on. :)
@germcd I think (my best bet...) that Silas is a student of Professor Jan Ondreak and that he's using the Professor account and adressing his Professor in a comment. But he might as well be talking of Jaap or David... :-S
this seems like his email signiture
"Jan Ondreák student University - UCM, Trnava, Slovakia, Faculty of Natural Sciences. Department of Applied Informatics and Mathematics. Field of study Applied Informatics"
In my opinion the question SQL query cheat sheet looks a lot like the very reason that the "recommendation/off-site resource" close reason exists. The fact that several links in the answers are dead serves to illustrate the point of the close reason.
It does have a few stars and some upvoted ans...
I have two data frames, the first contains 9994 rows and the second contains 60431 rows. I want to merge the two data frames such that the merged data frame contains combined columns of both data frames but only contains 9994 rows.
However, I get more than 9994 rows upon merge. How can I make s...
I am trying to read a csv file using readr::read_csv in R. The csv file that I am importing has about 150 columns, I am just including the first few columns for the example. I am looking to override the second column from the default type (which is date when I do read_csv) to character, or other ...
lot of introductory stuff: badge for acces to the building and parkingfacility, first meeting and some small introductory conversations with new collegues
first impression: this was the right choice for me :-) nice atmosphere, nice collegues and quite some freedom to determine what I'm going to do :-)
@m0nhawk it is off course not complete freedom, but they didn't pick specific tasks for me and I was able to indicate two topics already that sounds interesting to me to start working on
in the next weeks I will get an impression of all the activities, but the baseline is that I will have quite some freedom atm in choosing my topics of research (which is very very nice :-) )
most important thing is that I still have access to SO :-) (some internet sites are not accessible from here)
I'm not too familiar with ggplot2 but couldn't it be possible to use label.hjust=1 in guide_legend so the rows are right-justified and each letter is below the one the OP wants it to be?
I have code written in MATLAB which generates correlated GBM's. To test whether the code is correct, I compute the average sample correlation for all the simulations. By the law of large numbers, it should converge to the specified population correlation. This is true for the MATLAB code. It is a...
I have following R data table as data set:
Quarter Team Year Units Sales
2006Q3 A 2015 25000 61.1038751
2006Q3 B 2015 1370 4.5081774
2006Q3 C 2015 19103 34.9492249
2006Q3 D 2015 10757 0.5222169
2006Q3 E 2015 ...
i missed the error. I guess it's that he was trying to overwrite, and needed to start from scratch
i get that error a lot when I try to go from integer to numeric columns
or when i made a mistake defining a column (not an error, since the code runs), but the class is wrong... then try to correct the mistake without removing the column first
thanks, @Pro , i figure the op is probably doing something wrong if they have data like this, though (lots of columns; duplicated data across two objects)
i dislike all of 'em (mget, as.call and parse). in practice, i'd probably lean towards mget, replacing my second step with set(...), since all those gets are annoying and impede my reading
@MichaelChirico it skips the R language syntax validation process. I would expect building on language won't be slower, as it is the one step less in processing user request. @Frank if I'm annoyed with as.call(...) is basically make a helper which takes just colnames, etc.
so the syntax validation process will detect malformed calls when they are defined rather than on execution, while parsed expressions don't have that feature?
I'm pretty sure set ops could boost some practice math computing, escpesially using Reduce, I remember some stuff like that from university, the set theories in math
usually it was about finding intersection in arbitrary number of sets
for that matter, i'd like to see set pairwise set ops written as infix operators (i think Michael and i discussed this a while back), more like the / for setdiff, \cap and \cup for intersect and union, resp., as used in math
@jangorecki i mean intersect(DT1, DT2) gives rows of DT1 that are also in DT2. DT1 %in% DT2 could give a TRUE/FALSE vector for rows of DT1 being in DT2
(%in% is essentially part of the family of set operators)
or is left out of that family somewhat arbitrarily on the basis of its implementation, anyways