A recent thread in the StatSoft User Forum discussed different options for copying STATISTICA graphs into a PowerPoint Presentation. STATISTICA is integrated with Microsoft Office. This means you can open Word, Excel and PowerPoint presentations within STATISTICA. Then you can drag-n-drop graphs from STATISTICA into PowerPoint. But there is another option. Read More »
A recent thread in the StatSoft User Forum discussed different options for copying STATISTICA graphs into a PowerPoint Presentation.
STATISTICA is integrated with Microsoft Office. This means you can open Word, Excel and PowerPoint presentations within STATISTICA. Then you can drag-n-drop graphs from STATISTICA into PowerPoint.
But there is another option.
Read More »
High-quality graphs are often needed for publication in scientific journals or for use in presentations. STATISTICA offers tools for producing such graphs, and they can either be copied and pasted or saved as an image. This article will discuss some best practices for obtaining optimal quality from STATISTICA graphs... Read More »
High-quality graphs are often needed for publication in scientific journals or for use in presentations. STATISTICA offers tools for producing such graphs, and they can either be copied and pasted or saved as an image. This article will discuss some best practices for obtaining optimal quality from STATISTICA graphs...
Dr. Randy Bartlett is a statistician who has a vast knowledge of STATISTICA and has been using it for a number of years. Recently Dr. Bartlett sat down with us to discuss how he has been using STATISTICA throughout his career. Read More »
Dr. Randy Bartlett is a statistician who has a vast knowledge of STATISTICA and has been using it for a number of years. Recently Dr. Bartlett sat down with us to discuss how he has been using STATISTICA throughout his career.
Your data has a known pattern. It may have groups or categories of data. But this pattern is inside of your head rather than a variable. You need to create a new variable to express this pattern for your analysis project. Maybe you have five different DNA groups. Or you need to label your training data for a credit scoring project. You can autofill (auto calculate) values by dragging your mouse pointer across the data. But does anyone really want to drag through 1,000 or 100,000 rows of data? Read More »
Your data has a known pattern. It may have groups or categories of data. But this pattern is inside of your head rather than a variable. You need to create a new variable to express this pattern for your analysis project.
Maybe you have five different DNA groups. Or you need to label your training data for a credit scoring project.
You can autofill (auto calculate) values by dragging your mouse pointer across the data. But does anyone really want to drag through 1,000 or 100,000 rows of data?
Sometimes your data has a pattern, but this pattern isn't expressed within a variable. Maybe every other row is an "away" game for your baseball data set. Or maybe you have genetic data broken into 5 segments. Regardless, you have some type of data grouping that is known but not recorded. So, typically you start by adding a new variable to your data set. Then you add data to this variable by using autofill. Read More »
Sometimes your data has a pattern, but this pattern isn't expressed within a variable.
Maybe every other row is an "away" game for your baseball data set. Or maybe you have genetic data broken into 5 segments.
Regardless, you have some type of data grouping that is known but not recorded.
So, typically you start by adding a new variable to your data set. Then you add data to this variable by using autofill.
A few days before the second round of the presidential election, StatSoft Polska published a forecast of the election results by professor Andrzej Sokołowski, obtained using STATISTICA tools. The forecast not only predicted the winner of the election but also the support given for each candidate – the error of the forecast was less than 1 percent. StatSoft Polska predicted that the winner, Bronisław Komorowski, would receive 53.96% of the vote, and the actual outcome was that he received 53.01% of the... Read More »
A few days before the second round of the presidential election, StatSoft Polska published a forecast of the election results by professor Andrzej Sokołowski, obtained using STATISTICA tools. The forecast not only predicted the winner of the election but also the support given for each candidate – the error of the forecast was less than 1 percent. StatSoft Polska predicted that the winner, Bronisław Komorowski, would receive 53.96% of the vote, and the actual outcome was that he received 53.01% of the...
The 4th conference based on real life STATISTICA Success Stories organized by StatSoft Germany will take place on October 27, 2010 in Mannheim, Germany. The focus of the event is to illustrate the growing importance of data-based decisions based on concrete solutions. There will be eight speakers from... Read More »
The 4th conference based on real life STATISTICA Success Stories organized by StatSoft Germany will take place on October 27, 2010 in Mannheim, Germany. The focus of the event is to illustrate the growing importance of data-based decisions based on concrete solutions. There will be eight speakers from...
STATISTICA Enterprise provides tools that allow you to easily query from a database, and then analyze that data via the standard quality control charts. But suppose you are currently interested in only a portion of the data? In that case, STATISTICA Enterprise allows the user to interactively filter out the unwanted data at run-time. Read More »
STATISTICA Enterprise provides tools that allow you to easily query from a database, and then analyze that data via the standard quality control charts. But suppose you are currently interested in only a portion of the data? In that case, STATISTICA Enterprise allows the user to interactively filter out the unwanted data at run-time.