Which modern IDE do you use with R [closed] - r

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Closed 11 years ago.
I realize that there was a similar question asked here, but this is over a year and a half old and the landscape has changed quite a bit. I'm not sure the accepted answer would be the same if asked today, so I'd like to get people's feedback.
There seems to be a lot of buzz going on for http://www.rstudio.org. Have people changed over from previous IDE's to this one recently? What were the impacts of this change (good and bad). Has anyone done an analysis of the landscape recently. What are your thoughts on the prior list?
This question is probably best as a wiki that people can edit as new IDEs come out for R.

I just made the switch to Rkward, which I enjoy a lot more than what I was using earlier: notepad++ with NppToR. I hadn't heard of RStudio -- I'll have to check it out. Thanks!

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What are the most popular open source build systems nowadays? [closed]

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Closed 11 years ago.
There are a lot of opensources build systems, and most of them are multiplatform, multilanguage, cross-everything.
I'm not interested on which one is the best (which would be offtopic by the way), but I'd like to know which ones are used most.
So, do we have any kind of statistic about their actual usage? Could you provide any link?
As there is no tracking process, I doubt that this kind of information is available. You could check the number of artifacts in maven central for example, but it won't tell that much about actual usage and may be viewed rather as a trend. Some build tool developers list some of the most reknowned users on their sites, most don't

good book for basics of networking and os [closed]

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Closed 10 years ago.
i need good book for basics of networking and about os. I am first year cse student, I want to get into hacking world so need to get knowledge of networking and working of os. right now I have no knowledge of this, so can u please suggest some good book for starting on these topics. thaks.
I think that "Operating System Concepts" (silberschatz, galvin and gagne) is a very good book for beginners to understand the basics of the operating systems
http://www.amazon.com/Operating-Concepts-Seventh-Abraham-Silberschatz/dp/0471694665

Where can I get man pages with examples [closed]

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Closed 10 years ago.
Where can I get man pages with examples. I can improve my coding knowledge.
There is no better place than /usr/share/man/man3. There are tons and tons of examples there (section 3 is the API section, which I think is what you want; your description wasn't really clear).
Nothing beats a good book. Michael Kerrisk, the Linux manpages maintainer, has published a book titled "The Linux Programming Interface". There are also lots of older books on Unix programming, the most famous of them is probably "Advanced Programming in the Unix Environment", by the late W. Richard Stevens.

Good TCP/IP networking book for a programmer? [closed]

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Closed 10 years ago.
Every day I write Web applications, and I have a good understanding of HTTP. However I want to close the gaps in my knowlege of network architecture. I'm not a sysadmin, so a hard-core sysadmin reference book would probably be a bit much for me, but I'm also not looking for a book on how to write code in any way -- I'm interested in the mechanisms underneath all that fun Web code I write.
Any recommendations?
TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1: The Protocols by W. Richard Stevens is the book you want to read.
http://www.amazon.com/TCP-Illustrated-Vol-Addison-Wesley-Professional/dp/0201633469
Also by the great W. Richard Stevens is Unix Network Programming (http://www.amazon.com/UNIX-Network-Programming-Networking-Sockets/dp/013490012X).

What are some good 'software design' books / resources that are currently recommended? [closed]

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Closed 10 years ago.
I recently applied to several full time positions among some of the tech giants, and this was among some of the feedback I received.
I know what good coding practice generally entails, but am not so sure on largescale software design that mixes not only creativity but also a sharp technical focus.
What do you guys recommend?
Code Complete is always a winner.
The Pragmatic Programmer

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