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.
Quickly make tables of descriptive statistics (i.e., counts, percentages, confidence intervals) for categorical variables. This package is designed to work in a Tidyverse pipeline, and consideration has been given to get results from R to Microsoft Word ® with minimal pain.
This package provides a typical gait analysis requires the examination of the motion of nine joint angles on the left-hand side and six joint angles on the right-hand side across multiple subjects. Due to the quantity and complexity of the data, it is useful to calculate the amount by which a subjectâ s gait deviates from an average normal profile and to represent this deviation as a single number. Such a measure can quantify the overall severity of a condition affecting walking, monitor progress, or evaluate the outcome of an intervention prescribed to improve the gait pattern. This R package provides tools for computing the Functional Gait Deviation Index, a novel index for quantifying gait pathology using multivariate functional principal component analysis. The package supports analysis at the level of both legs combined, individual legs, and individual joints/planes. It includes functions for functional data preprocessing, multivariate functional principal component decomposition, FGDI computation, and visualisation of gait abnormality scores. Further details can be found in Minhas, S. K., Sangeux, M., Polak, J., & Carey, M. (2025). The Functional Gait Deviation Index. Journal of Applied Statistics <doi:10.1080/02664763.2025.2514150>.
Calculation of Evapotranspiration by FAO Penman-Monteith equation based on Allen, R. G., Pereira, L. S., Raes, D., Smith, M. (1998, ISBN:92-5-104219-5) "Crop evapotranspiration - Guidelines for computing crop water requirements - FAO Irrigation and drainage paper 56".
This package provides an implementation of concurrent or varying coefficient regression methods for functional data. The implementations are done for both dense and sparsely observed functional data. Pointwise confidence bands can be constructed for each case. Further, the influence of past predictor values are modeled by a smooth history index function, while the effects on the response are described by smooth varying coefficient functions, which are very useful in analyzing real data such as COVID data. References: Yao, F., Müller, H.G., Wang, J.L. (2005) <doi:10.1214/009053605000000660>. Sentürk, D., Müller, H.G. (2010) <doi:10.1198/jasa.2010.tm09228>.
Download data sets from Kenneth's French finance data library site <http://mba.tuck.dartmouth.edu/pages/faculty/ken.french/data_library.html>, reads all the data subsets from the file. Allows R users to collect the data as tidyverse'-ready data frames.
Links datasets through fuzzy string matching using pretrained text embeddings. Produces more accurate record linkage when lexical string distance metrics are a poor guide to match quality (e.g., "Patricia" is more lexically similar to "Patrick" than it is to "Trish"). Capable of performing multilingual record linkage. Methods are described in Ornstein (2025) <doi:10.1017/pan.2025.10016>.
This package provides a dynamic programming algorithm for the fast segmentation of univariate signals into piecewise constant profiles. The fpop package is a wrapper to a C++ implementation of the fpop (Functional Pruning Optimal Partioning) algorithm described in Maidstone et al. 2017 <doi:10.1007/s11222-016-9636-3>. The problem of detecting changepoints in an univariate sequence is formulated in terms of minimising the mean squared error over segmentations. The fpop algorithm exactly minimizes the mean squared error for a penalty linear in the number of changepoints.
Download Data from the FAOSTAT Database of the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of the United Nations. A list of functions to download statistics from FAOSTAT (database of the FAO <https://www.fao.org/faostat/>) and WDI (database of the World Bank <https://data.worldbank.org/>), and to perform some harmonization operations.
This package provides a research estimation tool for analysts that work with sample-based inventory data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) Program.
Fuzzy set ordination is a multivariate analysis used in ecology to relate the composition of samples to possible explanatory variables. While differing in theory and method, in practice, the use is similar to constrained ordination. The package contains plotting and summary functions as well as the analyses.
Read and write Frictionless Data Packages. A Data Package (<https://specs.frictionlessdata.io/data-package/>) is a simple container format and standard to describe and package a collection of (tabular) data. It is typically used to publish FAIR (<https://www.go-fair.org/fair-principles/>) and open datasets.
This package performs functional regression, and some related approaches, for intensive longitudinal data (see the book by Walls & Schafer, 2006, Models for Intensive Longitudinal Data, Oxford) when such data is not necessarily observed on an equally spaced grid of times. The approach generally follows the ideas of Goldsmith, Bobb, Crainiceanu, Caffo, and Reich (2011)<DOI:10.1198/jcgs.2010.10007> and the approach taken in their sample code, but with some modifications to make it more feasible to use with long rather than wide, non-rectangular longitudinal datasets with unequal and potentially random measurement times. It also allows easy plotting of the correlation between the smoothed covariate and the outcome as a function of time, which can add additional insights on how to interpret a functional regression. Additionally, it also provides several permutation tests for the significance of the functional predictor. The heuristic interpretation of ``time is used to describe the index of the functional predictor, but the same methods can equally be used for another unidimensional continuous index, such as space along a north-south axis. Note that most of the functionality of this package has been superseded by added features after 2016 in the pfr function by Jonathan Gellar, Mathew W. McLean, Jeff Goldsmith, and Fabian Scheipl, in the refund package built by Jeff Goldsmith and co-authors and maintained by Julia Wrobel. The development of the funreg package in 2015 and 2016 was part of a research project supported by Award R03 CA171809-01 from the National Cancer Institute and Award P50 DA010075 from the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the National Cancer Institute, or the National Institutes of Health.
Create local, regional, and global explanations for any machine learning model with forward marginal effects. You provide a model and data, and fmeffects computes feature effects. The package is based on the theory in: C. A. Scholbeck, G. Casalicchio, C. Molnar, B. Bischl, and C. Heumann (2022) <doi:10.48550/arXiv.2201.08837>.
This package provides color palettes designed to be reminiscent of text on paper. The color schemes were taken from <https://stephango.com/flexoki>. Includes discrete, continuous, and binned scales that are not necessarily color-blind friendly. Simple scale and theme functions are available for use with ggplot2'.
Fast and numerically stable estimation of a covariance matrix by banding the Cholesky factor using a modified Gram-Schmidt algorithm implemented in RcppArmadilo. See <http://stat.umn.edu/~molst029> for details on the algorithm.
Catalogues of resolution IV regular fractional factorial designs in 128 runs are provided for up to 33 2-level factors. The catalogues are complete, excluding resolution IV designs without 5-letter words, because these do not add value for a search for unblocked clear designs. The previous package version 1.0 with complete catalogues up to 24 runs (24 runs and a namespace added later) can be downloaded from the authors website.
For cleaning and analysis of graphs, such as animal closing force measurements. forceR was initially written and optimized to deal with insect bite force measurements, but can be used for any time series. Includes a full workflow to load, plot and crop data, correct amplifier and baseline drifts, identify individual peak shapes (bites), rescale (normalize) peak curves, and find best polynomial fits to describe and analyze force curve shapes.
Efficient computation of the Liu regression coefficient paths, Liu-related statistics and information criteria for a grid of the regularization parameter. The computations are based on the C++ library Armadillo through the R package Rcpp'.
An implementation of methods presented by Spiegelhalter (2005) <doi:10.1002/sim.1970> Funnel plots for comparing institutional performance, for standardised ratios, ratios of counts and proportions with additive overdispersion adjustment.
Construction and smart selection of Gaussian process models for analysis of computer experiments with emphasis on treatment of functional inputs that are regularly sampled. This package offers: (i) flexible modeling of functional-input regression problems through the fairly general Gaussian process model; (ii) built-in dimension reduction for functional inputs; (iii) heuristic optimization of the structural parameters of the model (e.g., active inputs, kernel function, type of distance). An in-depth tutorial in the use of funGp is provided in Betancourt et al. (2024) <doi:10.18637/jss.v109.i05> and Metamodeling background is provided in Betancourt et al. (2020) <doi:10.1016/j.ress.2020.106870>. The algorithm for structural parameter optimization is described in <https://hal.science/hal-02532713>.
An R interface for generating features for a cohort using data in the Common Data Model. Features can be constructed using default or custom made feature definitions. Furthermore it's possible to aggregate features and get the summary statistics.
Estimates the conditional error distributions of random forest predictions and common parameters of those distributions, including conditional misclassification rates, conditional mean squared prediction errors, conditional biases, and conditional quantiles, by out-of-bag weighting of out-of-bag prediction errors as proposed by Lu and Hardin (2021). This package is compatible with several existing packages that implement random forests in R.
This package provides functionality to produce graphs of probability density functions and cumulative distribution functions with few keystrokes, allows shading under the curve of the probability density function to illustrate concepts such as p-values and critical values, and fits a simple linear regression line on a scatter plot with the equation as the main title.
An efficient algorithm to fit and tune kernel quantile regression models based on the majorization-minimization (MM) method. It can also fit multiple quantile curves simultaneously without crossing.