[R] Should there be an R-beginners list?

Paul Gilbert pgilbert902 at gmail.com
Mon Nov 25 18:10:53 CET 2013



On 13-11-25 06:00 AM, r-help-request at r-project.org wrote:
> Date: Sun, 24 Nov 2013 13:04:43 -0600
> From: Yihui Xie<xie at yihui.name>
> To: Bert Gunter<gunter.berton at gene.com>
> Cc:"r-help at r-project.org"  <r-help at r-project.org>
> Subject: Re: [R] Should there be an R-beginners list?
> Message-ID:
> 	<CANROs4d=UsU3oFqmTXBugV9v4_T9R+c3M0S15LrDcFPDj1Q_Vw at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
>
> I'm not aware of a discussion on this, but I would say no.

Just for the record, there was a discussion of this in a thread called 
"newbie list" in August 2001 when R-help started getting busy:
   http://tolstoy.newcastle.edu.au/R/help/01c/0880.html
Predates StackOverflow I think, but several of the comments may still be 
valid.

Paul

> Fragmentation is bad. Further fragmentation is worse.
>
> TL;DR
> =====
>
> Actually I'd say all mailing lists except r-devel should be moving to
> StackOverlow in the future (disclaimer: I'm not affiliated with it).
> Mailing lists are good for a smaller group of people, and especially
> good when more focused on discussions on development (including bug
> reports). The better place for questions is a web forum. Both you and
> I have been staying in these R mailing lists for a few years now. You
> can recall how many times a user was asked to post to another mailing
> list ("this is not an appropriate list to ask your question; please
> post to r-such-and-such instead"), how many times you see something
> like "Alternative HTML removed", how many times you see a post "Bla
> Bla (was: Foo Bar)", and how many times users were reminded "Please
> read the posting guide", "Please do read", and "PLEASE do read". But
> it just does not help much even if you write "PLEASE DO READ".
>
> Why do we have such problems in the mailing lists again and again? Is
> that simply because users are not respecting the rules? I do not think
> so. I believe that is the flaw of mailing lists. A mailing list is
> managed by a small team (hey, Martin, thank you). On StackOverflow,
> you simply edit the tags of a post to make it belong to a new "mailing
> list" (you can post with tags "r+ubuntu+graphics", or "r+lattice",
> etc). There is no need to request and wait for the system admin to
> make a decision. Users can help themselves, and help others as well.
> HTML can be good in many cases, actually. Who hates syntax
> highlighting and R plots in an R question? You are free to ask a
> question that is poorly formatted, and there are good chances that it
> will be immediately edited by another experienced user. You are free
> to yell in the comments asking for more details before posting a
> formal answer. You can express "ah, this is a bad question" by
> down-voting so that future readers know that guy screwed up and we
> just let the world ignore the noise. It is like peer-review, and the
> reviewers can help you improve your post. In a mailing list, when you
> are done, you are done. You are forever written in history, right or
> wrong, smart or stupid. You want to delete your record in the history?
> No, no, gentleman, it was your fault not reading the post guide.
>
> For me, I understand all the rationale behind the mailing list model.
> I'm just saying, the primary goal for such a service is to discuss
> issues about R, instead of issues induced by the mailing list itself.
> We could have made some issues not directly related to R go away by
> community efforts instead of giving instructions a million times,
> given an appropriate platform.
>
> Five years, 42,000 posts:http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/r
> I'm not terribly worried about transition from mailing lists to SO.
>
> Sorry about the generalization of the original topic, but I hate using
> a new title "Should there be R mailing lists? (was: Should there be an
> R-beginners list?)"
>
> Last but not least, I probably need to clarify that I benefited a lot
> from the mailing lists in the past, and I truly appreciate it. I wrote
> this with the future in mind, not the past. The past was good, and the
> future can be better.
>
> Regards,
> Yihui
> --
> Yihui Xie<xieyihui at gmail.com>
> Web:http://yihui.name
> Department of Statistics, Iowa State University
> 2215 Snedecor Hall, Ames, IA
>
>
> On Sun, Nov 24, 2013 at 11:13 AM, Bert Gunter<gunter.berton at gene.com>  wrote:
>> >Folks:
>> >
>> >If this has been previously discussed and settled, please say so and
>> >refer me to the discussion. If you believe this to be inappropriate or
>> >otherwise frivolous, also please say so, as I do not wish to waste
>> >your time or this space.
>> >
>> >I write as a long time reader and sometimes contributor to r-help. Due
>> >to R's growth in usage by a broad data analysis community (engineers,
>> >scientists, social scientists, finance, "informaticians", as well as
>> >more "traditional" statisticians), this list seems to me to becoming
>> >deluged by requests for help by "casual" users and students for whom R
>> >is not going to be regularly or extensively used. I would characterize
>> >this group as having only basic statistical, programming, and data
>> >analysis skills. This is not meant as a criticism, and there are
>> >certainly many for whom this is inaccurate. But ...
>> >
>> >By and large, such users have not spend much time with R's docs,
>> >including tutorials or FAQ's. Many of their posts reflect this, and
>> >can be answered with basic replies or references to docs, to wit: What
>> >is the difference between "ifelse" and "if else"? FAQ 7.31. Confusion
>> >of data frames, matrices, and spreadsheet tables; etc.
>> >
>> >Would it be useful, then, to establish an R-beginners list
>> >specifically to absorb this traffic and free up R-help from what I
>> >would say was its original intent, to provide a forum for serious,
>> >more dedicated R users (Again, no criticism is intended here)?
>> >
>> >I realize that, whether or not this suggestion is worthwhile, there
>> >are several ways it could fail. First, too few might be interested in
>> >responding to posts on the new list. Second, too few might consider
>> >themselves "beginners" who post to it. Etc. So I would certainly say
>> >any such effort ought to be a pilot and tentative .
>> >
>> >I'll stop here. Again, criticize freely and/or send me off somewhere
>> >else to prior discussion. Or to where it should be discussed. Or just
>> >ignore, of course.
>> >
>> >Best,
>> >Bert
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >--
>> >
>> >Bert Gunter
>> >Genentech Nonclinical Biostatistics
>> >
>> >(650) 467-7374



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