Statistics
Statistics is a mathematical discipline concerned with developing and studying mathematical methods for collecting, analyzing, interpreting, and presenting large quantities of numerical data. Statistics is a highly interdisciplinary field of study with applications in fields such as physics, chemistry, life sciences, political science, and economics.
Here are 9,481 public repositories matching this topic...
-
Updated
Mar 15, 2022 - Jupyter Notebook
-
Updated
Apr 7, 2022 - Go
-
Updated
Apr 7, 2022 - TypeScript
-
Updated
Apr 8, 2022 - Elixir
-
Updated
Apr 9, 2022 - JavaScript
-
Updated
Apr 6, 2022 - Jupyter Notebook
Collection of follow-ups to #5827. These can/should be broken out into individual PRs. Many are relatively straightforward and would make a good first PR.
General
- Documentation (none was added in original PR).
- Release notes.
- Example notebook.
- Double-check how
sm.tsa.arima.ARIMAworks withfix_params(it should fail except when the fit method isstatespace
-
Updated
Apr 8, 2022 - HTML
-
Updated
Mar 18, 2022 - Python
-
Updated
Mar 29, 2022 - Python
-
Updated
Mar 22, 2022 - Java
-
Updated
Feb 27, 2022 - Shell
-
Updated
Mar 31, 2022 - Go
-
Updated
Oct 22, 2019 - Jupyter Notebook
-
Updated
Apr 9, 2022 - Python
-
Updated
Nov 18, 2020 - C#
The currently implemented version of the horseshoe distribution is not the parameterization that most ML papers use. This limits the ease of use of this as, for example, a prior in a tfp.layers.KLDivergenceAddLoss or in tfp.layers.DenseReparameterization. The regularized horseshoe would also be useful as an implemented distribution.
The alternative parameterization is shown here:
https://www.
Since the default output is meant to be human-readable, would it make sense to add thousands separators to make the output more easily readable?
-
Updated
Apr 1, 2022
-
Updated
Apr 7, 2022 - Java
-
Updated
Jan 28, 2021 - C++
-
Updated
Apr 6, 2022 - JavaScript
For example, the data is (3.8,4.5,4.6,4.7,4.9)
while I'm using tech.tablesaw.aggregate.AggregateFunctions.percentile function, the 90th percentile is 4.9, however, if the percentile function supports linear interpolation, the 90th percentile should be 4.82, which is adopted by most other programming languages.
When we show data for a metric, we currently don't include the current day's worth of data. For users just getting set up, they may only have events from today, and want to test out if the query is working, and by excluding events from 'today', they can't see results.
TODO:
- In
packages/back-end/src/services/experiments.tson line329, instead of using the current date as the value
-
Updated
Apr 9, 2022 - C#
-
Updated
Apr 1, 2022 - JavaScript
See in #22547
We need to rep