Prix bas
CHF72.80
Habituellement expédié sous 3 à 4 semaines.
"The development of progressive data analysis tools that are technically excellent creates a superior opportunity for us as data science users. The concepts of this book can enhance the overall user experience and increase the likelihood that the developed tools become preferred tools accomplishing the desired purpose. Learning from Wickham's vast experience in R coding improves tools that provide targeted users the ability to be more efficient, clearer R analysis code writers, better debuggers of their own syntax errors, and positioned to enjoy faster performance time. These are many of the advantages I have enjoyed using tidyverse developed by Wickham with the "Advanced R" philosophy." ~Technometrics
Auteur
Hadley Wickham is Chief Scientist at RStudio, an Adjunct Professor at Stanford University and the University of Auckland, and a member of the R Foundation. He is the lead developer of the tidyverse, a collection of R packages, including ggplot2 and dplyr, designed to support data science. He is also the author of R for Data Science (with Garrett Grolemund), R Packages, and ggplot2: elegant graphics for data analysis.
Texte du rabat
Advanced R presents useful tools and techniques for attacking many types of R programming problems, helping you avoid mistakes and dead ends. With more than ten years of experience programming in R, the author illustrates the elegance, beauty, and flexibility at the heart of R.
Résumé
Advanced R helps you understand how R works at a fundamental level. It is designed for R programmers who want to deepen their understanding of the language, and programmers experienced in other languages who want to understand what makes R different and special.
This book will teach you the foundations of R; three fundamental programming paradigms (functional, object-oriented, and metaprogramming); and powerful techniques for debugging and optimising
your code.
By reading this book, you will learn:
The difference between an object and its name, and why the distinction is important
The important vector data structures, how they fit together, and how you can pull them apart using subsetting
The fine details of functions and environments
The condition system, which powers messages, warnings, and errors
The powerful functional programming paradigm, which can replace many for loops
The three most important OO systems: S3, S4, and R6
The tidy eval toolkit for metaprogramming, which allows you to manipulate code and control evaluation
Effective debugging techniques that you can deploy, regardless of how your code is run
How to find and remove performance bottlenecks The second edition is a comprehensive update:
New foundational chapters: "Names and values," "Control flow," and "Conditions"
comprehensive coverage of object oriented programming with chapters on S3, S4, R6, and how to choose between them
Much deeper coverage of metaprogramming, including the new tidy evaluation framework
use of new package like rlang (http://rlang.r-lib.org), which provides a clean interface to low-level operations, and purr (http://purrr.tidyverse.org/) for functional programming
Use of color in code chunks and figures
Hadley Wickham is Chief Scientist at RStudio, an Adjunct Professor at Stanford University and the University of Auckland, and a member of the R Foundation. He is the lead developer of the tidyverse, a collection of R packages, including ggplot2 and dplyr, designed to support data science. He is also the author of R for Data Science (with Garrett Grolemund), R Packages, and ggplot2: Elegant Graphics for Data Analysis.
Contenu
Introduction. Foundations. Data structures. Subsetting. Vocabulary. Style guide. Functions. OO field guide. Environments. Debugging, condition handling, and defensive programming. Functional Programming. Functional programming. Functionals. Function operators. Computing on the Language. Non-standard evaluation. Expressions. Domain-specific languages. Performance. Performance. Optimising code. Memory. High performance functions with Rcpp. R's C interface.