skulblaka@sh.itjust.works
on 02 Dec 16:04
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A tutorial with R and BUGS
Part of me understands that BUGS must stand for something I’m not familiar with, but I can also assure you, if I’m following a tutorial for data analysis it is going to contain bugs.
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Honestly these small things should be in textbooks more often. Should give your brain a reset from the monotony of reading a textbook.
<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/pictrs/image/cb81744e-2901-425c-a79f-05cd5a2e81ad.webp">
This cat co-authored a paper
and has gotten more academic accolades than any one here. probably more than all of us combined. (Sorry, I’m dragging the group down.)
Signature look of superiority
The hallmark of a Siamese cat. All cats are above the world, Siamese think they are above all cats.
has a Wikipedia article too. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F._D._C._Willard
Makes you wonder what the first cat did to be replaced by the time the second picture was taken.
didn’t show their work.
You’re allowed to not show your work, you just have to write either “this is left as an exercise to the reader” or “it is trivial to show that …”
A favourite textbook for me:
<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ca/pictrs/image/be9ab04d-feea-4bfd-90bb-be32258406db.jpeg">
sites.google.com/site/doingbayesiandataanalysis/
Part of me understands that BUGS must stand for something I’m not familiar with, but I can also assure you, if I’m following a tutorial for data analysis it is going to contain bugs.
The new version uses Stan who will judge you silently for not knowing what you’re doing.
He also gives you mysterious C++ compilation errors to keep things interesting.
μ
Cat tax
<img alt="" src="https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/239a722e-fa63-4486-8d06-166b0281a6c8.jpeg">