Last Updated on November 23, 2023
6. R Graphics Cookbook, 2nd edition by Winston Chang
R Graphics Cookbook is a practical guide that provides more than 150 recipes to help you generate high-quality graphs quickly, without having to comb through all the details of R’s graphing systems.
Each recipe tackles a specific problem with a solution you can apply to your own project, and includes a discussion of how and why the recipe works.
7. Engineering Production-Grade Shiny Apps by Colin Fay, Sébastien Rochette, Vincent Guyader, Cervan Girard
This book explores building robust Shiny applications. The authors focus on the process, the workflow, and the necessary tools for building production-grade Shiny Applications.
Engineering Production-Grade Shiny Apps will not get you started with Shiny, nor talk how to work with Shiny once it is sent to production. What we’ll see is the process of building an application that will later be sent to production.
You’ll need a working knowledge of how to build a small application using Shiny.
8. Efficient R Programming by Colin Gillespie, Robin Lovelace
Efficient R Programming is for anyone who wants to make their R code faster to type, faster to run and more scalable.
These considerations generally come after learning the very basics of R for data analysis: we assume you are either accustomed to R or proficient at programming in other languages, although this book could still be of use to beginners.
Drawing on years of experience teaching R courses, authors Colin Gillespie and Robin Lovelace provide practical advice on a range of topics-from optimizing the set-up of RStudio to leveraging C++-that make this book a useful addition to any R user’s bookshelf.
9. Geocomputation with R by Robin Lovelace, Jakub Nowosad, Jannes Muenchow
Geocomputation with R is about using the power of computers to do things with geographic data.
It teaches a range of spatial skills, including: reading, writing and manipulating geographic data; making static and interactive maps; applying geocomputation to solve real-world problems; and modeling geographic phenomena.
By demonstrating how various geographic operations can be linked, in reproducible ‘code chunks’ that intersperse the prose, the book also teaches a transparent and thus scientific workflow.
10. Forecasting: Principles and Practice by Rob J Hyndman and George Athanasopoulos
Forecasting: Principles and Practice is intended to provide a comprehensive introduction to forecasting methods and to present enough information about each method for readers to be able to use them sensibly.
The authors don’t attempt to give a thorough discussion of the theoretical details behind each method, although the references at the end of each chapter will fill in many of those details.
The authors use R throughout the book and they intend students to learn how to forecast with R.
Next page: Page 3 – Fundamentals of Data Visualization and more books
Pages in this article:
Page 1 – R for Data Science and more books
Page 2 – R Graphics Cookbook and more books
Page 3 – Fundamentals of Data Visualization and more books
Page 4 – Data Analysis for the Life Sciences and more books
Page 5 – An Introduction To R and more books
Page 6 – Modern Statistics for Modern Biology and more books
Page 7 – A Little Book of R for Biomedical Statistics and more books
All books in this series:
Free Programming Books | |
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Ada | ALGOL-like programming language, extended from Pascal and other languages |
Agda | Dependently typed functional language based on intuitionistic Type Theory |
Arduino | Inexpensive, flexible, open source microcontroller platform |
Assembly | As close to writing machine code without writing in pure hexadecimal |
Awk | Versatile language designed for pattern scanning and processing language |
Bash | Shell and command language; popular both as a shell and a scripting language |
BASIC | Beginner’s All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code |
C | General-purpose, procedural, portable, high-level language |
C++ | General-purpose, portable, free-form, multi-paradigm language |
C# | Combines the power and flexibility of C++ with the simplicity of Visual Basic |
Clojure | Dialect of the Lisp programming language |
ClojureScript | Compiler for Clojure that targets JavaScript |
COBOL | Common Business-Oriented Language |
CoffeeScript | Transcompiles into JavaScript inspired by Ruby, Python and Haskell |
Coq | Dependently typed language similar to Agda, Idris, F* and others |
Crystal | General-purpose, concurrent, multi-paradigm, object-oriented language |
CSS | CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) specifies a web page’s appearance |
D | General-purpose systems programming language with a C-like syntax |
Dart | Client-optimized language for fast apps on multiple platforms |
Dylan | Multi-paradigm language supporting functional and object-oriented coding |
ECMAScript | Best known as the language embedded in web browsers |
Eiffel | Object-oriented language designed by Bertrand Meyer |
Elixir | Relatively new functional language running on the Erlang virtual machine |
Erlang | General-purpose, concurrent, declarative, functional language |
F# | Uses functional, imperative, and object-oriented programming methods |
Factor | Dynamic stack-based programming language |
Forth | Imperative stack-based programming language |
Fortran | The first high-level language, using the first compiler |
Go | Compiled, statically typed programming language |
Groovy | Powerful, optionally typed and dynamic language |
Haskell | Standardized, general-purpose, polymorphically, statically typed language |
HTML | HyperText Markup Language |
Icon | Wide variety of features for processing and presenting symbolic data |
J | Array programming language based primarily on APL |
Java | General-purpose, concurrent, class-based, object-oriented, high-level language |
JavaScript | Interpreted, prototype-based, scripting language |
Julia | High-level, high-performance language for technical computing |
Kotlin | More modern version of Java |
LabVIEW | Designed to enable domain experts to build power systems quickly |
LaTeX | Professional document preparation system and document markup language |
Lisp | Unique features - excellent to study programming constructs |
Logo | Dialect of Lisp that features interactivity, modularity, extensibility |
Lua | Designed as an embeddable scripting language |
Markdown | Plain text formatting syntax designed to be easy-to-read and easy-to-write |
Objective-C | Object-oriented language that adds Smalltalk-style messaging to C |
OCaml | The main implementation of the Caml language |
Pascal | Imperative and procedural language designed in the late 1960s |
Perl | High-level, general-purpose, interpreted, scripting, dynamic language |
PHP | PHP has been at the helm of the web for many years |
PostScript | Interpreted, stack-based and Turing complete language |
Prolog | A general purpose, declarative, logic programming language |
PureScript | Small strongly, statically typed language compiling to JavaScript |
Python | General-purpose, structured, powerful language |
QML | Hierarchical declarative language for user interface layout - JSON-like syntax |
R | De facto standard among statisticians and data analysts |
Racket | General-purpose, object-oriented, multi-paradigm, functional language |
Raku | Member of the Perl family of programming languages |
Ruby | General purpose, scripting, structured, flexible, fully object-oriented language |
Rust | Ideal for systems, embedded, and other performance critical code |
Scala | Modern, object-functional, multi-paradigm, Java-based language |
Scheme | A general-purpose, functional language descended from Lisp and Algol |
Scratch | Visual programming language designed for 8-16 year-old children |
SQL | Access and manipulate data held in a relational database management system |
Standard ML | General-purpose functional language characterized as "Lisp with types" |
Swift | Powerful and intuitive general-purpose programming language |
Tcl | Dynamic language based on concepts of Lisp, C, and Unix shells |
TeX | Markup and programming language - create professional quality typeset text |
TypeScript | Strict syntactical superset of JavaScript adding optional static typing |
Vala | Object-oriented language, syntactically similar to C# |
VHDL | Hardware description language used in electronic design automation |
VimL | Powerful scripting language of the Vim editor |
XML | Rules for defining semantic tags describing structure ad meaning |