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This package provides a collection of miscellaneous basic statistic functions and convenience wrappers for efficiently describing data. The author's intention was to create a toolbox, which facilitates the (notoriously time consuming) first descriptive tasks in data analysis, consisting of calculating descriptive statistics, drawing graphical summaries and reporting the results. The package contains furthermore functions to produce documents using MS Word (or PowerPoint) and functions to import data from Excel. Many of the included functions can be found scattered in other packages and other sources written partly by Titans of R. The reason for collecting them here, was primarily to have them consolidated in ONE instead of dozens of packages (which themselves might depend on other packages which are not needed at all), and to provide a common and consistent interface as far as function and arguments naming, NA handling, recycling rules etc. are concerned. Google style guides were used as naming rules (in absence of convincing alternatives). The BigCamelCase style was consequently applied to functions borrowed from contributed R packages as well.
This package provides tools for creating, viewing, and assessing qualitative palettes with many (20-30 or more) colors. See Coombes and colleagues (2019) https://doi:10.18637/jss.v090.c01.
This package provides a utility for R to parse a bibtex file.
This package provides a general-purpose tool for dynamic report generation in R using Literate Programming techniques.
This package provides tools to obtain estimated marginal means (EMMs) for many linear, generalized linear, and mixed models. It can be used to compute contrasts or linear functions of EMMs, trends, and comparisons of slopes.
This package implements the Differential Evolution algorithm. This algorithm is used for the global optimization of a real-valued function of a real-valued parameter vector. The implementation of DifferentialEvolution in DEoptim interfaces with C code for efficiency.
This package provides functions to plot and manipulate multigraphs, signed and valued graphs, bipartite graphs, multilevel graphs, and Cayley graphs with various layout options.
This package provides tools for reading .xls and .sbj files which are written by the proprietary program z-Tree for developing and carrying out economic experiments.
This package contains functions to implement the methodology and considerations laid out by Marks et al. in the article "Measuring abnormality in high dimensional spaces: applications in biomechanical gait analysis". Using high-dimensional datasets to measure a subject's overall level of abnormality as compared to a reference population is often needed in outcomes research.
These utilities facilitate the programmatic manipulations of formulas, expressions, calls, assignments and other R language objects. These objects all share the same structure: a left-hand side, operator and right-hand side. This package provides methods for accessing and modifying this structures as well as extracting and replacing names and symbols from these objects.
Parametric time warping aligns patterns. It aims to put corresponding features at the same locations. The algorithm searches for an optimal polynomial describing the warping. It is possible to align one sample to a reference, several samples to the same reference, or several samples to several references. One can choose between calculating individual warpings, or one global warping for a set of samples and one reference. Two optimization criteria are implemented: RMS error and WCC. Both warping of peak profiles and of peak lists are supported.
The tensor product of two arrays is notionally an outer product of the arrays collapsed in specific extents by summing along the appropriate diagonals. This package allows you to compute the tensor product of arrays.
Circular layout is an efficient way to visualise huge amounts of information. This package provides an implementation of circular layout generation in R as well as an enhancement of available software. Its flexibility is based on the usage of low-level graphics functions such that self-defined high-level graphics can be easily implemented by users for specific purposes. Together with the seamless connection between the powerful computational and visual environment in R, it gives users more convenience and freedom to design figures for better understanding complex patterns behind multi-dimensional data.
Call job::job(<code here>) to run R code as an RStudio job and keep your console free in the meantime. This allows for a productive workflow while testing (multiple) long-running chunks of code. It can also be used to organize results using the RStudio Jobs GUI or to test code in a clean environment. Two RStudio Addins can be used to run selected code as a job.
This package provides access to the text shaping functionality in the HarfBuzz library and the bidirectional algorithm in the Fribidi library. This is a low-level utility package mainly for graphic devices that expands upon the font tool-set provided by the systemfonts package.
The ROI is a framework for handling optimization problems in R.
This package provides a collection of tools to make working with physical measurements easier. One can convert between metric and imperial units, or calculate a dimension's unknown value from other dimensions' measurements.
This package allows for fast, correct, consistent, portable, as well as convenient character string/text processing in every locale and any native encoding. Owing to the use of the ICU library, the package provides R users with platform-independent functions known to Java, Perl, Python, PHP, and Ruby programmers. Among available features there are: pattern searching (e.g. via regular expressions), random string generation, string collation, transliteration, concatenation, date-time formatting and parsing, etc.
This package contains functions to generate pre-defined summary statistics from activPAL events files. The package also contains functions to produce informative graphics that visualize physical activity behaviour and trends. This includes generating graphs that align physical activity behaviour with additional time based observations described by other data sets, such as sleep diaries and continuous glucose monitoring data.
This package provides implementation of methods for estimation of quantitative maps from Multi-Parameter Mapping (MPM) acquisitions including adaptive smoothing methods in the framework of the ESTATICS model. The smoothing method is described in Mohammadi et al. (2017). <doi:10.20347/WIAS.PREPRINT.2432>. Usage of the package is also described in Polzehl and Tabelow (2019), Magnetic Resonance Brain Imaging, Chapter 6, Springer, Use R! Series. <doi:10.1007/978-3-030-29184-6_6>.
This package is a port of the new matplotlib color maps (viridis, magma, plasma and inferno) to R. matplotlib is a popular plotting library for Python. These color maps are designed in such a way that they will analytically be perfectly perceptually-uniform, both in regular form and also when converted to black-and-white. They are also designed to be perceived by readers with the most common form of color blindness. This is the lite version of the more complete viridis package.
This package provides tools for the estimation of indicators on social exclusion and poverty, as well as an implementation of Pareto tail modeling for empirical income distributions.
Magrittr provides a mechanism for chaining commands with a new forward-pipe operator, %>%. This operator will forward a value, or the result of an expression, into the next function call/expression. There is flexible support for the type of right-hand side expressions. For more information, see package vignette. To quote Rene Magritte, "Ceci n'est pas un pipe."
This package allows the user to specify debug messages as special string constants, and control debugging of packages via environment variables.