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R Pirate [updated] -

đŸŽâ€â˜ ïžđŸ“Š Note: The real package is {yarrr} (Yet Another R Regression Review) by Nathaniel Phillips, featuring pirateplot . If ye want the actual help file, type ?pirateplot in R after installin’ yarrr .

In the vast, churnin’ ocean of data science, where spreadsheets be the dull harbors and SAS be the tyrannical navy, there sails a brave breed of coder: the . Armed not with a cutlass, but with a tidyverse oar and a chest overflowin’ with ggplot2 treasures.

Why sail as a pirate in R? Because you answer to no Excel macro, no point-and-click prison. You plunder functions from CRAN, forge new ones from raw logic, and bury dead code with # comments. You share your treasure on GitHub for all buccaneers to fork. r pirate

Ahoy, seeker of digital plunder! Here be a text on (a playful take on the {pirate} package in R, or just the swashbucklin’ spirit of R coding). Text: Sailing the R Seas with {pirate}

library(yarrr) pirateplot(formula = weight ~ Diet + Time, data = ChickWeight, theme = 2) 
they unleash the —a fearsome, beautiful hybrid of a boxplot, violin plot, and beanplot, adorned with jittered points like cannonballs scatterin’ across a galleon’s deck. The colors be as bold as a Caribbean sunset, and the confidence intervals mark the spot where X marks the mean. đŸŽâ€â˜ ïžđŸ“Š Note: The real package is {yarrr} (Yet

But the heartiest R pirate knows of the legendary {pirate} package (part of the {yarrr} fleet). With a single chant:

So raise a grog (or a warm coffee) to the R pirate: may your p-values be low, your plots be fierce, and your NA s never sink your ship. Armed not with a cutlass, but with a

The true R pirate lives by the code (of conduct, and of <- ). They reject the click-and-point galleons of proprietary software. Instead, they hoist the Jolly Roger of reproducibility—every map, every loot chest (data frame), and every cannon blast (statistical test) logged in an R Markdown logbook.