# : classical statistics revisited pdf Rnw R
# 10: modeling variance pdf Rnw R
# 11: dynamic models pdf Rnw R
# Appendix: notes on algebra etc. pdf Rnw R
R user John Christie points out a handy feature introduced in R 2.10: you can now read directly from a text file compressed using gzip or other file-compression tools. He notes: R added transparent decompression for certain kinds of compressed files in the latest version (2.10). If you have your files compressed with bzip2, xvz, or gzip they can be read into R as if they are plain text files. You should have the proper filename extensions. The command... myData <- read.table('myFile.gz') #gzip compressed files have a "gz" extension Will work just as if 'myFile.gz' were the raw text file....
using Eclipse (without R code), you can go to File - New Project (Texlipse - LaTeX Project). Once you have a basic working environment, it's easy to experiment with all the details of LaTeX. Here are some we
M. Gschwandtner, и P. Filzmoser. Synergies of Soft Computing and Statistics for Intelligent Data Analysis, том 190 из Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, Springer Berlin Heidelberg, (2013)
V. Todorov, и P. Filzmoser. Synergies of Soft Computing and Statistics for Intelligent Data Analysis, том 190 из Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, Springer Berlin Heidelberg, (2013)