[R] Learning R: which book to choose?
Chris Lawrence
cnlawren at phy.olemiss.edu
Sun Oct 13 06:21:05 CEST 2002
On Oct 12, Jan Krupa wrote:
> I am new to R. I am going to by one of the following book:
>
> 1.
> William N. Venables and Brian D. Ripley. Modern Applied Statistics
> with S-Plus.
> Third Edition. Springer, 1999. ISBN 0-387-98825-4.
>
> 2.
> The Fourth Edition of the book from point 1.
>
> 3.
> `S Programming'
> by W. N. Venables and B. D. Ripley
> Springer. ISBN 0-387-98966-8, 2000.
>
>
> I can only by one of the above books.
It really depends on your field and level of expertise. If you are a
statistician (i.e. you have a degree in statistics or biostatistics),
or from a very strong mathematical backgroud, MASS is probably the
appropriate book, although you may want something more introductory.
(I haven't seen MASS4 yet.)
OTOH, if you're a social scientist, I'd *strongly* recommend John
Fox's "Companion to Applied Regression with R and S-Plus."
(It also depends somewhat on what you actually want to do with R, as
others have suggested...)
Chris
--
Chris Lawrence <cnlawren at phy.olemiss.edu> - http://www.lordsutch.com/chris/
Computer Systems Manager, Physics and Astronomy, Univ. of Mississippi
Ph.D. Candidate, Political Science
125B Lewis Hall - 662-915-5765
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