R for SAS and SPSS Users

Author:   Robert A. Muenchen
Publisher:   Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
Edition:   2009 ed.
ISBN:  

9780387094175


Pages:   492
Publication Date:   01 November 2008
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


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R for SAS and SPSS Users


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Overview

This book introduces R using SAS and SPSS terms. It demonstrates which of the add-on packages are most like SAS and SPSS and compares them to R's built-in functions. It compares and contrasts the differing approaches of all three packages.

Full Product Details

Author:   Robert A. Muenchen
Publisher:   Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
Imprint:   Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
Edition:   2009 ed.
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.862kg
ISBN:  

9780387094175


ISBN 10:   0387094172
Pages:   492
Publication Date:   01 November 2008
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

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Reviews

From the reviews This is a really great book. It is easy to read, quite comprehensive, and would be extremely valuable to both regular R users and users of SAS and SPSS who wish to switch to or learn about R!An invaluable reference. - David Hitchcock, University of South Carolina Thanks for writing R for SAS and SPSS Users--it is a comprehensible and clever document. The graphics chapter is superb! - Tony N. Brown, Vanderbilt University As his title suggests, Robert Muenchen crafted this to be a Rosetta Stone for SAS and SPSS users to start learning R quickly and effectively. Has he achieved this? Yes, and more. -Ralph O'Brien, Case Western Reserve University, ASA Fellow I am a professional SAS and SPSS programmer and found this book extremely useful. - Tony Chu, Public Policy Research Data Analyst I found the book extremely helpful. Over the last few months I am regularly reaching for the book from my bookshelf to find sensible R code and to help with some data manipulation. The material is laid out in a way that makes it very accessible. Because of this I recommend this book to any R user regardless of his or her familiarity with SAS or SPSS. For those dedicated SAS and SPSS users I especially recommend the book. As discussed in the Introduction section, the basics of the R language are very different from SAS and SPSS but this book's layout, style, and content help with these differences. The ordering of the material is very user-friendly and sensible...To new R users, and to R users of some years experience, I recommend this book. For new R users it will demystify many aspects, and for existing R users it will have many answers to those questions you have been too afraid to ask in public... The American Statistician, February 2010, Vol. 64, No. 1 The title of this book accurately describes its goal: to teach SAS and SPSS users how to use R...The book is laid out well, with sensible features such as a separate font for programs; tables listing complete programs in all three languages; an index with entries that include main SAS or SPSS commands and procedures, allowing users to locate R equivalents fairly quickly; and appendices comparing the three languages' attributes and procedures/packages. It is much easier to read and likely comparably more helpful than a manual...There is no question in my mind that this can be a very useful book for its intended audience. Biometrics, 65, 1313, December 2009 R for SAS and SPSS Users provides an excellent introduction to R. As Muenchen, Manager of the Statistical Computing Center at the University of Tennessee, notes in the Preface, the SPSS and SAS platforms, introduced over 30 years ago, have much in common -- but are very different than 10 year old R. The book's first chapters focus on gentle GUI's for R before taking on the language starting in Chapter 8. At that point the book meticulously covers data management, data structures, programming, graphics and basic statistical analysis in R. The prose is clear, the examples tied to their SPSS and SAS analogs. The handling of both traditional and newer ggplot2 graphics is comprehensive: SPSS and SAS users will undoubtedly find lots to like. The appendixes contrast R jargon with SPSS/SAS and compare SPSS/SAS products with the corresponding R packages. (Information Management, June 15, 2010) This book is designed for SAS/SPSS users interested in making a transition to R or wanting to add the additional capabilities of R to their repertoire. ! book provides many simple how to s for new users of R and lots of comparative examples for users with knowledge of SAS and SPSS. ! It is intended to help make the transition from SAS or SPSS to R as painless and smooth ! . (Roger M. Sauter, Technometrics, Vol. 53 (1), February, 2011)


From the reviews <p>a oeThis is a really great book. It is easy to read, quite comprehensive, and would be extremely valuable to both regular R users and users of SAS and SPSS who wish to switch to or learn about Ra ]An invaluable reference.a - David Hitchcock, University of South Carolina <p>a oeThanks for writing R for SAS and SPSS Users--it is a comprehensible and clever document. The graphics chapter is superb!a - Tony N. Brown, Vanderbilt University <p> As his title suggests, Robert Muenchen crafted this to be a Rosetta Stone for SAS and SPSS users to start learning R quickly and effectively. Has he achieved this? Yes, and more. -Ralph O'Brien, Case Western Reserve University, ASA Fellow <p>a oeI am a professional SAS and SPSS programmer and found this book extremely useful.a - Tony Chu, Public Policy Research Data Analyst


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