Which software (e.g., MS Excel / Word, R, Matlab etc) do you find best to use for presenting statistics data visually for publication? @PhDForum @AcademicChatter @JASPStats #HE @OxExpPsy @RHULPsychology @VBourne_stats @ProfAndyField @MaartenSpeek @UCLPALS @o_guest @PaLSPPG
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Replying to @VictorKovalets @PhDForum and
R is more satisfying to figure out, but I can make a plot indistinguishable from R using Excel literally 10 times faster.
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Replying to @LaurentWada @VictorKovalets and
I want to anonymous, but I also want to post some of my published figures and have people guess whether it was R or Excel.
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Replying to @LaurentWada @VictorKovalets and
People get way too snobby about software, it’s just a tool to do a job. If you’re happy with SPSS use it, if you prefer R use it, love Excel? No problem. Use what works for you (and your collaborators).
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Replying to @ProfAndyField @LaurentWada and
I mean sure, but the reproducibility of Excel is lower unless you always document the version and which buttons you pressed. With code the commands are the figure so less work to makes reproducible by default.
3 replies 4 retweets 20 likes -
Replying to @o_guest @ProfAndyField and
Sure. But this ignores that you need to know what you are doing, when you code your statistics in R. If that's not what you are good at, it is better to stick to what you know. IMHO (I am guessing this is what Andy means)
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Replying to @GordonFeld @ProfAndyField and
You need to know what you're doing when you use Excel too. Just because the output looks good doesn't mean it's correct. You need to know how to do your job regardless.
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Replying to @o_guest @ProfAndyField and
Of course. But I would argue that in Excel and SPSS it is easier to know, (roughly) what you are doing. There are just less options and you can usually follow a recipe. In e.g. R there is much more that can go wrong.
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Replying to @GordonFeld @o_guest and
That's precisely the point of open software. If you have doubts, you can check precisely how things are being done. Or, at least, have confidence that more people has laid eyes on it.
1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
Yeah, the collective bug-checking and -fixing is amazing.
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