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mkrajnak

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Nov 9, 2009, 9:40:47 AM11/9/09
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I've been catching up on Collective Intelligence this weekend,
specifically naive bayes and fisher methods.

Like John with Ruby, I've reimplemented the algorithms only this time
in clojure.

If you are interested I am keeping the sources here:

http://bitbucket.org/doshigatai/learn-cj/src/tip/src/docfilter/

Maybe this week we can compare the Python, Ruby, and Clojure
implementations...?

It would also be nice to to find someone in the group who has been
studying statistics lately who might be able to explain how the
inverse chi squared method is working...

Grant Rettke

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Nov 9, 2009, 10:20:34 AM11/9/09
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On Mon, Nov 9, 2009 at 8:40 AM, mkrajnak <mdkr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> If you are interested I am keeping the sources here:
>
> http://bitbucket.org/doshigatai/learn-cj/src/tip/src/docfilter/

What is doshigata?

> It would also be nice to to find someone in the group who has been
> studying statistics lately who might be able to explain how the
> inverse chi squared method is working...

By the end of the week I might be able to talk about bivariate
transformation of variables.

Dave Colwell

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Nov 9, 2009, 3:09:59 PM11/9/09
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I might be able to add a Groovy implementation for comparison. Aside
from the name, it appears to be a pretty useful language/extension.
I'm studying it so that I can build up to having Grails in my
programming toolbox.

Grant Rettke

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Nov 9, 2009, 3:13:12 PM11/9/09
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On Mon, Nov 9, 2009 at 2:09 PM, Dave Colwell <dcol...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I might be able to add a Groovy implementation for comparison.  Aside
> from the name, it appears to be a pretty useful language/extension.
> I'm studying it so that I can build up to having Grails in my
> programming toolbox.

Apparently the guy who took over Groovy "made it good" and now it is
the bees knees, along with Grails of course.

Wasn't BeanShell good enough?! ;)

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