Enter the query into the form above. You can look for specific version of a package by using @ symbol like this: gcc@10.
API method:
GET /api/packages?search=hello&page=1&limit=20
where search is your query, page is a page number and limit is a number of items on a single page. Pagination information (such as a number of pages and etc) is returned
in response headers.
If you'd like to join our channel webring send a patch to ~whereiseveryone/toys@lists.sr.ht adding your channel as an entry in channels.scm.
Automatize downloading of meteorological and hydrological data from publicly available repositories: OGIMET (<http://ogimet.com/index.phtml.en>), University of Wyoming - atmospheric vertical profiling data (<http://weather.uwyo.edu/upperair/>), Polish Institute of Meteorology and Water Management - National Research Institute (<https://danepubliczne.imgw.pl>), and National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). This package also allows for searching geographical coordinates for each observation and calculate distances to the nearest stations.
This package implements a wide range of model-based dose escalation designs, ranging from classical and modern continual reassessment methods (CRMs) based on dose-limiting toxicity endpoints to dual-endpoint designs taking into account a biomarker/efficacy outcome. The focus is on Bayesian inference, making it very easy to setup a new design with its own JAGS code. However, it is also possible to implement 3+3 designs for comparison or models with non-Bayesian estimation. The whole package is written in a modular form in the S4 class system, making it very flexible for adaptation to new models, escalation or stopping rules.
Build dendrograms with sample groups highlighted by different colors. Visualize results of hierarchical clustering analyses as dendrograms whose leaves and labels are colored according to sample grouping. Assess whether data point grouping aligns to naturally occurring clusters.
This package provides functions for hit gene identification and quantification of sgRNA (single-guided RNA) abundances for CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats) pooled screen data analysis. Details are in Jeong et al. (2019) <doi:10.1101/gr.245571.118> and Baggerly et al. (2003) <doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btg173>.
It is an open source insurance claim simulation engine sponsored by the Casualty Actuarial Society. It generates individual insurance claims including open claims, reopened claims, incurred but not reported claims and future claims. It also includes claim data fitting functions to help set simulation assumptions. It is useful for claim level reserving analysis. Parodi (2013) <https://www.actuaries.org.uk/documents/triangle-free-reserving-non-traditional-framework-estimating-reserves-and-reserve-uncertainty>.
This package contains the Correlates of State Policy Project dataset (+ codebook) assembled by Marty P. Jordan and Matt Grossmann (2020) <http://ippsr.msu.edu/public-policy/correlates-state-policy> used by the cspp package. The Correlates data contains over 3000 variables across more than 100 years that pertain to state politics and policy in the United States.
Procedures include Phillips (1995) FMVAR <doi:10.2307/2171721>, Kitamura and Phillips (1997) FMGMM <doi:10.1016/S0304-4076(97)00004-3>, Park (1992) CCR <doi:10.2307/2951679>, and so on. Tests with 1 or 2 structural breaks include Gregory and Hansen (1996) <doi:10.1016/0304-4076(69)41685-7>, Zivot and Andrews (1992) <doi:10.2307/1391541>, and Kurozumi (2002) <doi:10.1016/S0304-4076(01)00106-3>.
This package provides a dashboard supports the usage of cromwell'. Cromwell is a scientific workflow engine for command line users. This package utilizes cromwell REST APIs and provides these convenient functions: timing diagrams for running workflows, cromwell engine status, a tabular workflow list. For more information about cromwell', visit <http://cromwell.readthedocs.io>.
This package provides an extension to the purrr family of mapping functions to apply a function to each combination of elements in a list of inputs. Also includes functions for automatically detecting output type in mapping functions, finding every combination of elements of lists or rows of data frames, and applying multiple models to multiple subsets of a dataset.
This package contains the R functions needed to perform Cluster-Of-Clusters Analysis (COCA) and Consensus Clustering (CC). For further details please see Cabassi and Kirk (2020) <doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btaa593>.
Simulates time-to-event data with type I right censoring using two methods: the inverse CDF method and our proposed memoryless method. The latter method takes advantage of the memoryless property of survival and simulates a separate distribution between change-points. We include two parametric distributions: exponential and Weibull. Inverse CDF method draws on the work of Rainer Walke (2010), <https://www.demogr.mpg.de/papers/technicalreports/tr-2010-003.pdf>.
Facilitates dynamic exploration of text collections through an intuitive graphical user interface and the power of regular expressions. The package contains 1) a helper function to convert a data frame to a corporaexplorerobject and 2) a Shiny app for fast and flexible exploration of a corporaexplorerobject'. The package also includes demo apps with which one can explore Jane Austen's novels and the State of the Union Addresses (data from the janeaustenr and sotu packages respectively).
Design and use of control charts for detecting mean changes based on a delayed updating of the in-control parameter estimates. See Capizzi and Masarotto (2019) <doi:10.1080/00224065.2019.1640096> for the description of the method.
This package provides functions for evaluating and visualizing predictive model performance (specifically: binary classifiers) in the field of customer scoring. These metrics include lift, lift index, gain percentage, top-decile lift, F1-score, expected misclassification cost and absolute misclassification cost. See Berry & Linoff (2004, ISBN:0-471-47064-3), Witten and Frank (2005, 0-12-088407-0) and Blattberg, Kim & Neslin (2008, ISBN:978â 0â 387â 72578â 9) for details. Visualization functions are included for lift charts and gain percentage charts. All metrics that require class predictions offer the possibility to dynamically determine cutoff values for transforming real-valued probability predictions into class predictions.
This package implements Dirichlet multinomial modeling of relative abundance data using functionality provided by the Stan software. The purpose of this package is to provide a user friendly way to interface with Stan that is suitable for those new to modeling. For more regarding the modeling mathematics and computational techniques we use see our publication in Molecular Ecology Resources titled Dirichlet multinomial modeling outperforms alternatives for analysis of ecological count data (Harrison et al. 2020 <doi:10.1111/1755-0998.13128>).
Estimation and goodness-of-fit functions for copula-based models of bivariate data with arbitrary distributions (discrete, continuous, mixture of both types). The copula families considered here are the Gaussian, Student, Clayton, Frank, Gumbel, Joe, Plackett, BB1, BB6, BB7,BB8, together with the following non-central squared copula families in Nasri (2020) <doi:10.1016/j.spl.2020.108704>: ncs-gaussian, ncs-clayton, ncs-gumbel, ncs-frank, ncs-joe, and ncs-plackett. For theoretical details, see, e.g., Nasri and Remillard (2023) <arXiv:2301.13408>.
Concept maps are versatile tools used across disciplines to enhance understanding, teaching, brainstorming, and information organization. This package provides functions for processing and visualizing concept mapping data, involving the sequential use of cluster analysis (for sorting participants and statements), multidimensional scaling (for positioning statements in a conceptual space), and visualization techniques, including point cluster maps and dendrograms. The methodology and its validity are discussed in Kampen, J.K., Hageman, J.A., Breuer, M., & Tobi, H. (2025). "The validity of concept mapping: let's call a spade a spade." Qual Quant. <doi:10.1007/s11135-025-02351-z>.
Offers several functions for Configural Frequencies Analysis (CFA), which is a useful statistical tool for the analysis of multiway contingency tables. CFA was introduced by G. A. Lienert as Konfigurations Frequenz Analyse - KFA'. Lienert, G. A. (1971). Die Konfigurationsfrequenzanalyse: I. Ein neuer Weg zu Typen und Syndromen. Zeitschrift für Klinische Psychologie und Psychotherapie, 19(2), 99â 115.
Classifies the type of cancer using routinely collected data commonly found in cancer registries from pathology reports. The package implements the International Classification of Diseases for Oncology, 3rd Edition site (topography), histology (morphology), and behaviour codes of neoplasms to classify cancer type <https://www.who.int/standards/classifications/other-classifications/international-classification-of-diseases-for-oncology>. Classification in children utilize the International Classification of Childhood Cancer by Steliarova-Foucher et al. (2005) <doi:10.1002/cncr.20910>. Adolescent and young adult cancer classification is based on Barr et al. (2020) <doi:10.1002/cncr.33041>.
Confirms if the number is Luhn compliant. Can check if credit card, IMEI number or any other Luhn based number is correct. For more info see: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luhn_algorithm>.
The CoTiMA package performs meta-analyses of correlation matrices of repeatedly measured variables taken from studies that used different time intervals. Different time intervals between measurement occasions impose problems for meta-analyses because the effects (e.g. cross-lagged effects) cannot be simply aggregated, for example, by means of common fixed or random effects analysis. However, continuous time math, which is applied in CoTiMA', can be used to extrapolate or intrapolate the results from all studies to any desired time lag. By this, effects obtained in studies that used different time intervals can be meta-analyzed. CoTiMA fits models to empirical data using the structural equation model (SEM) package ctsem', the effects specified in a SEM are related to parameters that are not directly included in the model (i.e., continuous time parameters; together, they represent the continuous time structural equation model, CTSEM). Statistical model comparisons and significance tests are then performed on the continuous time parameter estimates. CoTiMA also allows analysis of publication bias (Egger's test, PET-PEESE estimates, zcurve analysis etc.) and analysis of statistical power (post hoc power, required sample sizes). See Dormann, C., Guthier, C., & Cortina, J. M. (2019) <doi:10.1177/1094428119847277>. and Guthier, C., Dormann, C., & Voelkle, M. C. (2020) <doi:10.1037/bul0000304>.
Column Text Format (CTF) is a new tabular data format designed for simplicity and performance. CTF is the simplest column store you can imagine: plain text files for each column in a table, and a metadata file. The underlying plain text means the data is human readable and familiar to programmers, unlike specialized binary formats. CTF is faster than row oriented formats like CSV when loading a subset of the columns in a table. This package provides functions to read and write CTF data from R.
This package performs a Correspondence Analysis (CA) on a contingency table and creates a scatterplot of the row and column points on the selected dimensions. Optionally, the function can add segments to the plot to visualize significant associations between row and column categories on the basis of positive (unadjusted) standardized residuals larger than a given threshold.
Loads and displays images, selectively masks specified background colors, bins pixels by color using either data-dependent or automatically generated color bins, quantitatively measures color similarity among images using one of several distance metrics for comparing pixel color clusters, and clusters images by object color similarity. Uses CIELAB, RGB, or HSV color spaces. Originally written for use with organism coloration (reef fish color diversity, butterfly mimicry, etc), but easily applicable for any image set.