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RStudio IDE (or RStudio) is an integrated development environment for R, a programming language for statistical computing and graphics. It is available in two formats: RStudio Desktop is a regular desktop application while RStudio Server runs on a remote server and allows accessing RStudio using a web browser .
The Comprehensive R Archive Network (CRAN) homepage. The Comprehensive R Archive Network (CRAN) is R's central software repository, supported by the R Foundation. [9] It contains an archive of the latest and previous versions of the R distribution, documentation, and contributed R packages. [10]
Version 1.0.0 released on February 29, 2000 (2000-02-29), a leap day; Version 2.0.0 released on October 4, 2004 (2004-10-04), "which at least had a nice ring to it" [45] The idea of naming R version releases was inspired by the Debian and Ubuntu version naming system. Dalgaard also noted that another reason for the use of Peanuts references for ...
R Tools for Visual Studio (RTVS) is a plug-in for the Microsoft Visual Studio integrated development environment (IDE), used to provide support for programming in the language R. It supports IntelliSense , debugging, plotting, remote execution, SQL integration, and more.
The development tools are available as open source. Binaries of the current version of OpenBUGS are available for Microsoft Windows, and the previous version for Linux, it can also run under WINE for Linux. Installation problems, development and usage questions are discussed at the OpenBUGS Bulletin Board.
This page is a co-ordination point for pages that were previously active, but have become obsolete and archived. Regular articles are not archived here or elsewhere because their previous versions may be viewed in the history tab. Note these pages are preserved primarily for historical interest. Policies contained within may be out-dated.
In 1992, the Macintosh version of Statistica was released. Statistica 5.0 was released in 1995. It ran on both the new 32-bit Windows 95/NT and the previous 16-bit version, Windows 3.1. It featured many new statistics and graphics procedures, a word-processor-style output editor (combining tables and graphs), and a built-in development ...
A developer might want to use an older SDK for a particular reason. For example, the Windows Server 2003 Platform SDK released in February 2003 was the last SDK to provide full support of Visual Studio 6.0. Some older PSDK versions can still be downloaded from the Microsoft Download center; others can be ordered on CD/DVD. [6]