Simon Straubinger har opdateret hans GitHub repository med valgresultater fra folketingsvalg, så det nu også inkluderer data fra det seneste folketingsvalg. Det fik mig til at lave et par tabeller i R med resultatet (herunder også med information om bl.a. stemmeprocenten). Jeg tilføjede også en rød baggrund til de partier, der ikke fik nok stemmer […]
Category: statistics
Quarto
I started using LaTeX 11 years ago, and I used it for most of my academic writing (PhD thesis, manuscripts, conference presentations, etc.). At some point I also used RMarkdown for my slides and a few projects, with LaTeX as the engine. I loved the simplicity of Markdown, especially compared to LaTeX. It felt so […]
Awesome statistics
Over the last ten years, I have shared several links to great statistics material on this blog. However, one challenge is that it is difficult for people, myself included, to find specific links, especially old links. Accordingly, I have thought about whether it would make sense to include categories to the different links. The solution […]
Potpourri: Statistics #89
1519. Applied Time Series Analysis and Forecasting with R 1520. Five Inspiring Data Visualization Galleries 1521. 10 Days Of Grad: Deep Learning From The First Principles 1522. Deep Learning Examples 1523. Interactive Tooltip Tables 1524. How to Run Surveys: A Guide to Creating Your Own Identifying Variation and Revealing 1525. Likert-Type Scale Response Anchors 1526. […]
Teaching material: Quantitative Politics with R #2
Five years ago, when I was working at the University of Kent, I wrote up some teaching material (with valuable help by Zoltán Fazekas). The material was publicly available under the name Quantitative Politics with R at qpolr.com. I introduced the material in a post back in 2019. In short, I have decided not to […]