potentially; I remember it was similar to this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/39920059/5977215 - where it centred around the difference between how data.frame and tibble handle selecing a single column
@joran It's all too easy to fall into the trap of always using the same old tired cuss words. Which is a shame because the English language is stuffed so very full of a range of insults suitable for a range of occasions
Sorry, that was a random post on that day, just poke around that day.
@BrodieG You can also link to the whole thread at once. Example there was instructive. With data.frame, all is good. With tibble, not so much. Author decided it was his fault. Whatever works in the upside-down world.
But I mostly miss gmane which was a better mail/news gateway and web interface to mailing lists.
(whole thread: meant the mailing list thread from mailman. no idea / don't care as much about so chat history. )
An increase in 1% in life expectancy results in a 5% increase in GDP per capita in the long run: making people healthier fuels economic growth @EconomistEvents #WaronCancer
I have a little stat question (just to check I'm not totally out of my mind here): I've seen in an article a barplot with a chi-square pvalue. At first "glance" I don't understand how the pvalue can be that non significative when the proportion clearly are different. I've taken roughly the proportions and found almost identical pvalue if there is only like 7 samples for each category.
Am I missing something statistically obvious here (like yes we can do a variant of chi-square with proportions o_O) or does my thinking sound ok ? Putting the plot I'm talking about thereunder. Thanks :-)
@Axeman there is some very confused explanation about what it supposed to refer to be it's like the legend of a supplementary figure so I guess, they didn't bother much...
But it's not very important, you helped me with what I was wondering, thanks++ :-)
You can guess at the sample size in each cluster by simulation/estimation, but the sample sizes for each cluster are not necessarily balanced, so there's several possible answers that can yield that p-value
@hadley Exactly my thought, I really doubt the barplot is that linked to the pvalue, they are illustrating something and putting a pvalue computed based on something else. Thank you very much Hadley for your help :-)
@DavidArenburg I mean actual money. Priests are ...well I m not gonna describe out of respect to religious people, but there are cases where priests stop a funeral and will not bury the dead until more money are given to them!!!
@DavidArenburg You have no idea. For example...a couple of years ago the priest that did the confessions in the prison for prisoners was arrested for smuggling drugs and mobile phones in
Well that is pretty broad and off topic question, so the answer seem to fit the expectations.
We could probably delete it as the OP doesn't seem to be planning to improve the question in the future (they accepted the answer), so it makes it pretty useless for future readers
I would guess that is some type of muricas convention, I would suggest working with EU convention, e.g. as.POSIXct(c("2015 1 0", "2015 1 1"), format = "%Y %W %w")
The ISO week date system is effectively a leap week calendar system that is part of the ISO 8601 date and time standard issued by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) since 1988 (last revised in 2004) and, before that, it was defined in ISO (R) 2015 since 1971. It is used (mainly) in government and business for fiscal years, as well as in timekeeping. This was previously known as "Industrial date coding". The system specifies a week year atop the Gregorian calendar by defining a notation for ordinal weeks of the year.
The Gregorian leap cycle, which has 97 leap days spread across...
Which is:
week <- function(date) {
doy <- as.numeric(format(date, format = '%j'))
dow <- as.numeric(format(date, format = '%u'))
floor((doy - dow + 10) / 7)
}
week(as.Date("2015-01-04"))
The latter gives 1, which is the Sunday before the Monday of the 1st day of the week.