Here are answers to some common questions about ade4 (more to come soon).
ade4
?The easiest way to install ade4 is to use install.packages("ade4")
in your R session.
ade4
?To install the development version from github:
::install_github("adeverse/ade4") remotes
ade4
version I’m using?In your R session, type:
packageDescription("ade4", field="Version")
adegraphics
?The package adegraphics
provides a complete reimplementation of graphical functionalities of ade4
. It is based on lattice
and provides a convenient way to manage graphics as objects. Moreover, it offers much more flexibility than ade4
to customize your plots.
adegraphics
?As adegraphics
provides a reimplementation of ade4
graphical functions, many functions have the same name in the two packages. To be sure to use adegraphics
functions, adegraphics
should be loaded after ade4
:
library(ade4)
library(adegraphics)
An alternative it to explicitly specify the package in the call using the ::
operator:
::s.label() adegraphics
s.class
function?The ellipses represent the main variation for individuals of a given class. They are based on inertia statistics not on significance levels.
In simple analysis (e.g., dudi.pca
), scores for individuals are stored in $li
element of the returned object
In simple analysis (e.g., dudi.pca
), scores for variables are stored in $co
element of the returned object
$l1
and $c1
elements of a dudi ?In simple analysis (e.g., dudi.pca
), the $c1
element contains the principal axes (aka “loadings” of the variables) and the $l1
element contains the principal components. The norm of these two elements is equal to 1, which makes them useful for drawing biplots (for example).