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5 messages · Stefan Janse van Rensburg, Gabor Grothendieck, Christofer Bogaso +2 more

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Dear list,

I apologise for the fact that this is somewhat off topic, but I wanted
to know if the list could recommend some good books on R. My colleague
is new to both statistics and R and I would like to get him something
to ease the "steep"-learning curve. His knowledge of statistics is
quite limited, but being a PHD in applied maths I do not want to get
anything that will insult his intelligence.

Is Modern Applied Statistics with S still a good bet? I used it a few
years back and thought it was an excellent guide. I was, however,
already proficient with R and I'm not sure how good it would be for a
novice. Also, our work is mostly concerned with econometrics / time
series.

Apart from that, I am personally in need of a book covering state
space methods in time series analysis, possibly with applications
covering dynamic latent factor models. My preference would be for an
applied type book, especially one using R.

Any and all comments are welcome.

Kind regards,

Stefan Janse van Rensburg
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83 R books and comments are here:
http://www.r-project.org/doc/bib/R-books.html

On Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 2:34 PM, Stefan Janse van
Rensburg<sjansevanrensburg at gmail.com> wrote:
1 day later
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[Off-topic]

""steep"-learning curve" means what? which takes very little time to learn a
lot of things? I thought steep learning curve means a curve with high slope
and hence my conclusion. Can guys here please clarify that? If I am right
then Stefan perhaps rightly asked a "FLAT learning curve" i.e. it takes lot
of times to understand a small thing.

Regards,
Stefan Janse van Rensburg wrote:

  
    
#
You should get used to English terms
not saying what they mean.  However,
in this instance the term can make
sense if you change your picture to:

xlab = "Amount Learned"
ylab = "Efort and/or Frustration"



Patrick Burns
patrick at burns-stat.com
+44 (0)20 8525 0696
http://www.burns-stat.com
(home of "The R Inferno" and "A Guide for the Unwilling S User")
Bogaso wrote: