newposttest

I think I have broken hugo testing whether this works

June 18, 2019

blogdown

There has been lots of talk about blogdown on #rstats Twitter recently and people have been talking up the Hugo “Academic theme”. I want to give it a go to update my lab website, so thought it might be a good idea to pull together all the useful links I’ve seen recently into one place. Alison Hill I used Alison’s blog post when I first set up this blog.

rm anova options

I’ve been analysing some future thinking data and playing around with packages that can do repeated ANOVA (I know, I should do LMM). There is more than one way to skin a cat and the differences come down to two things. the intuitiveness of the function arguments the readibility of the output Some checks to do before you start all of these packages assume that you within and between subjects variables are factors, but also that your participant id is a factor A few favourites Option 1: old school aov() This code comes from the ANOVA cookbook

Just Three Things

I love me a good #rstats screencast. David Robinson has been screencasting his #TidyTuesday efforts for the past few months and while it is GREAT to watch a master at work, I just don’t have time to watch someone code for an hour, in order to extract a handful of tips. So when I saw Nick Tierney tweet about posting short videos that contain Just Three Things, I thought “that is a GREAT idea.

infinite moon reader

I saw an intriguing tweet this afternoon. 🧙 ♂️Live preview for R Markdown! TIL that you can have a live preview of your #rstats Markdown docs! Just use the infinite_moon_reader function from the xaringan package. It works for all single-HTML-file outputs and even comes with a pre-made RStudio Addin! — Jozef Hajnala (@jozefhajnala) January 2, 2019 When Charles was visiting for #RCurious in June, she had written her slides in xaringan and was raving about infinite moon reader.

in Rmd

January 3, 2019