[R] What made us so popular Nov 16-20?
James W. MacDonald
jmacdon at med.umich.edu
Tue Nov 29 14:43:29 CET 2005
Peter Dalgaard wrote:
> Seeliger.Curt at epamail.epa.gov writes:
>
>
>>Duncan asks:
>>
>>>Did we get mentioned somewhere (e.g. Slashdot), or was someone just
>>>experimenting with some automated downloading?
>>
>>R was mentioned in last week's (I think) O'Reilly newsletter, which
>>included a link to a short article showing how easy it is to get R to
>>graph stuff like stock price histories. That's the publisher, not the
>>talking head.
>
>
> [See other mail for the link]
>
>
>>For what it's worth, the article isn't worth chasing down. It left a
>>beginner like me disappointed that R's capabilities weren't better
>>shown, and that he relied on Perl to do data manipulation.
>
>
>
> Er, where did you see Perl being used? The only thing that irked me
> (admittedly, I only skimmed the article) was that he was using
> regression models to test for correlation (why not cor.test()?) and
> speculates a bit wildly about the sign of a clearly nonsignificant
> relation. It's a bit superficial, but I suspect that this sort of
> paper has to be.
I think Curt is referring to this part:
A simple starting point is a vector or array of numbers. I downloaded
historical Standard and Poor's (S&P) 500 stock index data and wrote a
Perl program to convert the data into a simple two-column table. Figure
2 shows a snippet of the start of the file.
Best,
Jim
>
>
--
James W. MacDonald
Affymetrix and cDNA Microarray Core
University of Michigan Cancer Center
1500 E. Medical Center Drive
7410 CCGC
Ann Arbor MI 48109
734-647-5623
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