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Dealing with Rows and Columns | The R Files
https://rhints.wordpress.com/2008/09/08/dealing-with-rows-and-columns
Just another WordPress.com weblog. Dealing with Rows and Columns. September 8, 2008. So here’s the most useful command I’ve discovered so far for this:. Apply(x, margin, function). Where x is your data, margin indicates whether you want the operation performed over rows, margin = 1; columns, margin = 2; or both, margin = c(1,2); and of course function indicates the function you want performed (e.g. mean). Filed in The Basics. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Address never made public).
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The R environment | The R Files
https://rhints.wordpress.com/2008/06/12/the-r-environment
Just another WordPress.com weblog. June 12, 2008. So, let’s begin by touring the R interface. For me there are 3 useful parts of the R interface:. 1) The R console:. This is where R executes all of your commands, and this is where the output that R generates will be displayed. 2) The Quartz device window:. Using this window allows you to fine tune your commands, if they don’t work, or if you want to spruce them up. And, most importantly, you can save your commands for use in the future, being a...You are...
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September | 2008 | The R Files
https://rhints.wordpress.com/2008/09
Just another WordPress.com weblog. Dealing with Rows and Columns. September 8, 2008. So here’s the most useful command I’ve discovered so far for this:. Apply(x, margin, function). Where x is your data, margin indicates whether you want the operation performed over rows, margin = 1; columns, margin = 2; or both, margin = c(1,2); and of course function indicates the function you want performed (e.g. mean). Filed in The Basics. The R Project for Statistical Computing. Follow “The R Files”.
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Links - Christie Sukhdeo
http://sukhdeo.weebly.com/links.html
Useful Links and Resources. Http:/ www.scarabnet.org/ScarabNet/Home/Home.html. The Beetle Tree of Life:. Clarke Scholtz (leader in dung beetle research): http:/ www.up.ac.za/ . Trond Larsen's Dung Beetle site: http:/ scarabaeinae.lifedesks.org/. Frank Krell's website: http:/ www.dmns.org/science/museum-scientists/frank-krell. The Coleopterists Bulletin: http:/ www.bioone.org/loi/cole. Rob and Erik Stronkhorst's website "Dung Beetles of Africa": http:/ dungbeetlesofafrica.wordpress.com/. A program for Ba...
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Cancer type‐dependent genetic interactions between cancer driver alterations indicate plasticity of epistasis across cell types | Molecular Systems Biology
http://msb.embopress.org/content/11/7/824
Skip to main content. Molecular Systems Biology (Home). Search for this keyword. Review Series and Focuses. Molecular Systems Biology: 11 (7). Cancer type dependent genetic interactions between cancer driver alterations indicate plasticity of epistasis across cell types. Published online 30.07.2015. EMBL CRG Systems Biology Research Unit. Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG). Find this author on Google Scholar. Find this author on PubMed. Search for this author on this site. Find this author on PubMed.
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Changing your working directory revisited | The R Files
https://rhints.wordpress.com/2008/06/12/changing-your-working-directory-revisited
Just another WordPress.com weblog. Changing your working directory revisited. June 12, 2008. Change your directory manually the first time. Setwd(“your directory path gleaned from the R console here – keep the quotes”). Data - read.table(“youregoodtogo.txt”,header=TRUE). Filed in The Basics. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out.
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June | 2008 | The R Files
https://rhints.wordpress.com/2008/06
Just another WordPress.com weblog. Using packages not included in the default set. June 28, 2008. Every time you start R a set of packages is loaded that is stipulated in one of the background files that makes R tick. But what if you regularly use functions from a package that is not in the default group? Do we really have to go into the package manager (Packages and Data - Package Manager) and check the little box to load the package every time we use these functions? Figures, and their axes. So we̵...
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Exporting dataframes | The R Files
https://rhints.wordpress.com/2008/06/12/exporting-dataframes
Just another WordPress.com weblog. June 12, 2008. Once your data are in R, you may do crazy things to them. You may transform them, you may manipulate them, etc. etc. Sometimes I find it much easier to transform my data in R (with a simple line of code) than it would be to create whole spreadsheets and drag formulae everywhere as one would have to do in Excel. The question then becomes, how do you get this lovely transformed data out in some format that you can use in Excel? You want to do it in CANOCO!
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About | The R Files
https://rhints.wordpress.com/about
Just another WordPress.com weblog. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Google account. ( Log Out. Notify me of new comments via email. The R Project for Statistical Computing.
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Getting Started | The R Files
https://rhints.wordpress.com/2008/06/12/getting-started
Just another WordPress.com weblog. June 12, 2008. The first thing most people will probably want to do in R is get some data to work with. While you can input your data directly into R, the program does not provide an ideal environment for this. Really, you are much better off setting up your data in an Excel worksheet, and then importing the file into R. 1) Save your file as a tab delimited text file. This is the kind of file R likes to play with. 2) R does not like spaces. 3) Attach your data. The data...