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Tensor-train is a compact representation for higher-order tensors. Some algorithms for performing tensor-train decomposition are available such as TT-SVD, TT-WOPT, and TT-Cross. For the details of the algorithms, see I. V. Oseledets (2011) <doi:10.1137/090752286>, Yuan Longao, et al (2017) <doi:10.48550/arXiv.1709.02641>, I. V. Oseledets (2010) <doi:10.1016/j.laa.2009.07.024>.
Theme ggplot2', lattice', and base graphics based on a few choices, including foreground color, background color, accent color, and font family. Fonts that aren't available on the system, but are available via download on Google Fonts', can be automatically downloaded, cached, and registered for use with the showtext and ragg packages.
This package provides tools to help developers and producers manipulate R objects and outputs. It includes tools for displaying results and objects, and for formatting them in the correct format.
Performing the hypothesis tests for the two sample problem based on order statistics and power comparisons. Calculate the test statistic, density, distribution function, quantile function, random number generation and others.
Helper functions for empirical research in financial economics, addressing a variety of topics covered in Scheuch, Voigt, and Weiss (2023) <doi:10.1201/b23237>. The package is designed to provide shortcuts for issues extensively discussed in the book, facilitating easier application of its concepts. For more information and resources related to the book, visit <https://www.tidy-finance.org/r/index.html>.
This package provides a slightly-opinionated R interface for the Tremendous API (<https://www.tremendous.com/>). In addition to supporting GET and POST requests, tremendousr has, dare I say, tremendously intuitive functions for sending digital rewards and incentives directly from R.
Plant ecologists often need to collect "traits" data about plant species which are often scattered among various databases: TR8 contains a set of tools which take care of automatically retrieving some of those functional traits data for plant species from publicly available databases (The Ecological Flora of the British Isles, LEDA traitbase, Ellenberg values for Italian Flora, Mycorrhizal intensity databases, BROT, PLANTS, Jepson Flora Project). The TR8 name, inspired by "car plates" jokes, was chosen since it both reminds of the main object of the package and is extremely short to type.
This package provides a pure interface for the Telegram Bot API <http://core.telegram.org/bots/api>. In addition to the pure API implementation, it features a number of tools to make the development of Telegram bots with R easy and straightforward, providing an easy-to-use interface that takes some work off the programmer.
Each sequence is predicted by expanding the distance matrix. The compact set of hyper-parameters is tuned through random search.
Estimators for two functionals used to detect Gamma, Pareto or Lognormal distributions, as well as distributions exhibiting similar tail behavior, as introduced by Iwashita and Klar (2023) <doi:10.1111/stan.12316> and Klar (2024) <doi:10.1080/00031305.2024.2413081>. One of these functionals, g, originally proposed by Asmussen and Lehtomaa (2017) <doi:10.3390/risks5010010>, distinguishes between log-convex and log-concave tail behavior. Furthermore the characterization of the lognormal distribution is based on the work of Mosimann (1970) <doi:10.2307/2284599>. The package also includes methods for visualizing these estimators and their associated confidence intervals across various threshold values.
Differentiate client errors (4xx) from server errors (5xx) for the plumber and RestRserve HTTP API frameworks. The package also includes a built-in logging mechanism to standard output (STDOUT) or standard error (STDERR) depending on the log level.
This package provides user-friendly tools for creating and customizing clinical trial reports. By leveraging the teal framework, this package provides teal modules to easily create an interactive panel that allows for seamless adjustments to data presentation, thereby streamlining the creation of detailed and accurate reports.
Tautulli (<http://tautulli.com>) is a monitoring application for Plex Media Servers (<https://www.plex.tv>) which collects a lot of data about media items and server usage such as play counts. This package interacts with the Tautulli API of any specified server to get said data into R. The Tautulli API documentation is available at <https://github.com/Tautulli/Tautulli/blob/master/API.md>.
Likelihood-based estimation of mixed-effects transformation models using the Template Model Builder ('TMB', Kristensen et al., 2016) <doi:10.18637/jss.v070.i05>. The technical details of transformation models are given in Hothorn et al. (2018) <doi:10.1111/sjos.12291>. Likelihood contributions of exact, randomly censored (left, right, interval) and truncated observations are supported. The random effects are assumed to be normally distributed on the scale of the transformation function, the marginal likelihood is evaluated using the Laplace approximation, and the gradients are calculated with automatic differentiation (Tamasi & Hothorn, 2021) <doi:10.32614/RJ-2021-075>. Penalized smooth shift terms can be defined using the mgcv notation. Additive mixed-effects transformation models are described in Tamasi (2025) <doi:10.18637/jss.v114.i11>.
This package provides a collection of recipe datasets scraped from <https://www.allrecipes.com/>, containing two complementary datasets: allrecipes with 14,426 general recipes, and cuisines with 2,218 recipes categorized by country of origin. Both datasets include comprehensive recipe information such as ingredients, nutritional facts (calories, fat, carbs, protein), cooking times (preparation and cooking), ratings, and review metadata. All data has been cleaned and standardized, ready for analysis.
Generalization of the classification and regression tree (CART) model that partitions subjects into terminal nodes and tailors machine learning model to each terminal node.
Tidying functions built on data.table to provide quick and efficient data manipulation with minimal overhead.
Travel Time API <https://docs.traveltime.com/api/overview/introduction> helps users find locations by journey time rather than using â as the crow fliesâ distance. Time-based searching gives users more opportunities for personalisation and delivers a more relevant search.
Generalized estimating equations (GEE) are a popular choice for analyzing longitudinal binary outcomes. This package provides an interface for fitting GEE, currently for logistic regression, within the tern <https://cran.r-project.org/package=tern> framework (Zhu, Sabanés Bové et al., 2023) and tabulate results easily using rtables <https://cran.r-project.org/package=rtables> (Becker, Waddell et al., 2023). It builds on geepack <doi:10.18637/jss.v015.i02> (Højsgaard, Halekoh and Yan, 2006) for the actual GEE model fitting.
This package provides a suite of auxiliary functions that enhance time series estimation and forecasting, including a robust anomaly detection routine based on Chen and Liu (1993) <doi:10.2307/2290724> (imported and wrapped from the tsoutliers package), utilities for managing calendar and time conversions, performance metrics to assess both point forecasts and distributional predictions, advanced simulation by allowing the generation of time series componentsâ such as trend, seasonal, ARMA, irregular, and anomaliesâ in a modular fashion based on the innovations form of the state space model and a number of transformation methods including Box-Cox, Logit, Softplus-Logit and Sigmoid.
Conditional logistic regression with longitudinal follow up and individual-level random coefficients: A stable and efficient two-step estimation method.
Overall predictive performance is measured by a mean score (or loss), which decomposes into miscalibration, discrimination, and uncertainty components. The main focus is visualization of these distinct and complementary aspects in joint displays. See Dimitriadis, Gneiting, Jordan, Vogel (2024) <doi:10.1016/j.ijforecast.2023.09.007>.
Creates, manipulates, queries and repairs vectors of parameter terms. Parameter terms are the labels used to reference values in vectors, matrices and arrays. They represent the names in coefficient tables and the column names in mcmc and mcmc.list objects.
Features include the ability to extract tabled content from NISO-JATS-coded XML, any native HTML or HML file, DOCX, and PDF documents, and then collapse it into a text format that is readable by humans by mimicking the actions of a screen reader. As tables within PDF documents are extracted with the tabulapdf package, and the table captions and footnotes cannot be extracted, the results on tables within PDF documents have to be considered less precise. The function table2matrix() returns a list of the tables within a document as character matrices. table2text() collapses the matrix content into a list of character strings by imitating the behavior of a screen reader. The textual representation of characters and numbers can be unified with unifyMatrix() before parsing. The function table2stats() extracts the tabled statistical test results from the collapsed text with the function standardStats() from the JATSdecoder package and, if activated, checks the reported and coded p-values for consistency. Due to the great variability and potential complexity of table structures, parsing accuracy may vary. A detailed description of how tableParser works is provided here: <doi:10.48550/arXiv.2603.19756>.