r-recommended_3.1.3-1xenial_all.deb

STEP 1: Have you installed this repository?

If not, run this installation script command:

curl -s https://packagecloud.io/install/repositories/500px/public/script.deb.sh | sudo bash
copy
curl -s https://packagecloud.io/install/repositories/500px/public/script.deb.sh | sudo bash

STEP 2: Install the package
sudo apt-get install r-recommended=3.1.3-1xenial

GNU R collection of recommended packages [metapackage]

Full description:
  GNU R collection of recommended packages [metapackage]
 R is a system for statistical computation and graphics.  It consists
 of a language plus a run-time environment with graphics, a debugger,
 access to certain system functions, and the ability to run programs
 stored in script files.
 .
 The design of R has been heavily influenced by two existing languages:
 Becker, Chambers & Wilks' S and Sussman's Scheme.  Whereas the
 resulting language is very similar in appearance to S, the underlying
 implementation and semantics are derived from Scheme.
 .
 The core of R is an interpreted computer language which allows
 branching and looping as well as modular programming using functions.
 Most of the user-visible functions in R are written in R.  It is
 possible for the user to interface to procedures written in the
 C, C++, or FORTRAN languages for efficiency, and many of R's core
 functions do so.  The R distribution contains functionality for a
 large number of statistical procedures and underlying applied math
 computations.  There is also a large set of functions which provide
 a flexible graphical environment for creating various kinds of data
 presentations.
 .
 Additionally, several thousand extension "packages" are available from
 CRAN, the Comprehensive R Archive Network, many also as Debian packages,
 named 'r-cran-<name>'.
 .
 This Debian package is now a metapackage that depends on a set of
 packages that are recommended by the upstream R core team as part of a
 complete R distribution, and distributed along with the source of R
 itself, as well as directly via the CRAN network of mirrors. This set
 comprises the following packages (listed in their upstream names):
  - KernSmooth: Functions for kernel smoothing for Wand & Jones (1995)
  - Matrix: Classes and methods for dense and sparse matrices and
    operations on them using Lapack and SuiteSparse
  - MASS, class, nnet and spatial: packages from Venables and Ripley,
    `Modern Applied Statistics with S' (4th edition).
  - boot: Bootstrap R (S-Plus) Functions from the book "Bootstrap Methods
    and Their Applications" by A.C. Davison and D.V. Hinkley (1997).
  - cluster: Functions for clustering (by Rousseeuw et al.)
  - codetools: Code analysis tools for R
  - foreign: Read data stored by Minitab, S, SAS, SPSS, Stata, ...
  - lattice: Implementation of Trellis (R) graphics
  - mgcv: Multiple smoothing parameter estimation and GAMs by GCV
  - nlme: Linear and nonlinear mixed effects models
  - rpart: Recursive partitioning and regression trees
  - survival: Survival analysis, including penalised likelihood.

Checksums

MD5 8f1c5b1c16594e74548fd6776e20d68f
SHA1 1f12750bacaa9b4a2470e48d35bad4b22e549c31
SHA256 b268954ed0c384da6b3a9faa8468bf277d4e0c0aa64dba3d0519575fa3585c85
SHA512 70d61c1145b7261f8940a2b427aafff06c59048447bd74d35f92505ca060c528a597bc0d6244bef0f2ffda2e94c74f561f3373b6ebe91c134e8b2a00533b5f09

Depends

  • r-base-core (>= 3.1.3-1xenial), r-cran-boot (>= 1.2.19), r-cran-cluster (>= 1.9.6-2), r-cran-foreign (>= 0.7-2), r-cran-kernsmooth (>= 2.2.14), r-cran-lattice (>= 0.10.11), r-cran-mgcv (>= 1.1.5), r-cran-nlme (>= 3.1.52), r-cran-rpart (>= 3.1.20), r-cran-survival (>= 2.13.2-1), r-cran-mass, r-cran-class, r-cran-nnet, r-cran-spatial, r-cran-codetools, r-cran-matrix

Files

  • /usr/share/lintian/overrides/r-recommended

Uploaded

almost 6 years ago

Package Size

2.73 KB

Installed Size

40 KB

Downloads

6

wget

wget --content-disposition "https://packagecloud.io/500px/public/packages/ubuntu/xenial/r-recommended_3.1.3-1xenial_all.deb/download.deb?distro_version_id=165"

Homepage

http://www.r-project.org/