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Draw nicer Classification and Regression Trees with the rpart.plot package
by Joseph Rickert The basic way to plot a classification or regression tree built with R’s rpart() function is just to call plot. However, in general, the results just aren’t pretty. As it turns out, for some time now there has been a better way to plot rpart() trees: the prp() function in Stephen Milborrow’s rpart.plot package. This function is a veritable “Swiss Army Knife” for plotting trees and the documentation for the package is quite good: in addition to the package pdf, Stephen maintains a very nice and easy-to-read user manual on his webpage. However, it wasn’t until I...
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Draw nicer Classification and Regression Trees with the rpart.plot package
by Joseph Rickert The basic way to plot a classification or regression tree built with R’s rpart() function is just to call plot. However, in general, the results just aren’t pretty. As it turns out, for some time now there has been a better way to plot rpart() trees: the prp() function in Stephen Milborrow’s rpart.plot package. This function is a veritable “Swiss Army Knife” for plotting trees and the documentation for the package is quite good: in addition to the package pdf, Stephen maintains a very nice and easy-to-read user manual on his webpage. However, it wasn’t until I...
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Draw nicer Classification and Regression Trees with the rpart.plot package
by Joseph Rickert The basic way to plot a classification or regression tree built with R’s rpart() function is just to call plot. However, in general, the results just aren’t pretty. As it turns out, for some time now there has been a better way to plot rpart() trees: the prp() function in Stephen Milborrow’s rpart.plot package. This function is a veritable “Swiss Army Knife” for plotting trees and the documentation for the package is quite good: in addition to the package pdf, Stephen maintains a very nice and easy-to-read user manual on his webpage. However, it wasn’t until I...
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6- titleDraw nicer Classification and Regression Trees with the rpart.plot package (Revolutions)
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- descriptionby Joseph Rickert The basic way to plot a classification or regression tree built with R’s rpart() function is just to call plot. However, in general, the results just aren’t pretty. As it turns out, for some time now there has been a better way to plot rpart() trees: the prp() function in Stephen Milborrow’s rpart.plot package. This function is a veritable “Swiss Army Knife” for plotting trees and the documentation for the package is quite good: in addition to the package pdf, Stephen maintains a very nice and easy-to-read user manual on his webpage. However, it wasn’t until I...
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- og:descriptionby Joseph Rickert The basic way to plot a classification or regression tree built with R’s rpart() function is just to call plot. However, in general, the results just aren’t pretty. As it turns out, for some time now there has been a better way to plot rpart() trees: the prp() function in Stephen Milborrow’s rpart.plot package. This function is a veritable “Swiss Army Knife” for plotting trees and the documentation for the package is quite good: in addition to the package pdf, Stephen maintains a very nice and easy-to-read user manual on his webpage. However, it wasn’t until I...
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- twitter:descriptionby Joseph Rickert The basic way to plot a classification or regression tree built with R’s rpart() function is just to call plot. However, in general, the results just aren’t pretty. As it turns out, for some time now there has been a better way to plot rpart() trees: the prp() function in Stephen Milborrow’s rpart.plot package. This function is a veritable “Swiss Army Knife” for plotting trees and the documentation for the package is quite good: in addition to the package pdf, Stephen maintains a very nice and easy-to-read user manual on his webpage. However, it wasn’t until I...
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