If so, what is your career? How do you use it?
If so, what is your career? How do you use it?
Rrrrrrrrr you going to the mall later? That is what I am asking.
R u kidding me? Better off learning Swift, Objective-C or java...
Alllllrrrrrrrrrity then!
He aint tryin to be no assistant, people can get their own java. R u even payin attention?
I am so happy I don't understand the question.
R is the equivalent of a hobby joggers programming language. You would always be looked down upon by C programmers.
I don't, but I know people that do. As long as we are talking about this R:
Not R please wrote:
R is the equivalent of a hobby joggers programming language. You would always be looked down upon by C programmers.
If every language were a framing hammer, you'd be right.
R is not C
There's a new flavour of the month programming language every month.
C gets the job done. Most programmers are incompetent. They forget to free memory. They don't understand pointers. Garbage collection languages exist, to save bad programmers from themselves.
If you are doing GUIs, C may not be the tool for the job. But there's a reason Linux kernel code is exclusively C.
I work in Capital Markets for a F100 company and our data analytics team uses R and Python. I can use it a bit but it's not something I need to touch often. I wouldn't come to me for help on it.
Yes. Statistician. I use it for missing data imputation, propensity score matching, and data analysis.
I would love to lock myself away for a week and learn it so i could ditch the stats program i'm using now.
but it's tough to make the switch since you know your job will take 5 x as long using syntax you aren't sure of.
I use R or Python for most of my data analysis stuff (ranging for social science research to astrophysics). However, ordinary R is ugly. Use "R Studio" instead. It is free and it is much more user-friendly.