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Message-ID: <1386775185063-4682013.post@n4.nabble.com>
Date: 2013-12-11T15:19:45Z
From: bakerwl
Subject: fisher.test - can I use non-integer expected values?
In-Reply-To: <F694EC60-1AA5-4D04-B372-2BB977B1117A@gmail.com>

Thank you David, Peter, and Peter,

I understand now that I would be misusing fisher.test to use it for a
goodness-of-fit test and that non-integer data are inappropriate since it is
for testing two sets of observed counts.

Peter D., it does not seem like a good idea for me to "cheat" fisher.test to
produce a goodness-of-fit outcome by using a larger set of expected data or
by generating all the configurations behind the fisher.test approach.
Wouldn't it be statistically inappropriate to turn fisher.test into a
goodness-of-fit test when it was not designed for this? Perhaps this is a
statistical question, not an R question, though. 

What is the R function that does an exact test for goodness-of-fit for
categorical data with > 2 categories?





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