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Time-stamp: <2014-04-07 16:28:57 tony>

Current Status: IMPROVING

but we are rebuilding it.

Fast Start

Here’s a general fast start approach for using this.

  1. Get access to a Common Lisp implementation on your platform. Make sure you have BLAS, LAPACK, and their corresponding development environments on your system.

    For example, on a recent debian (testing), one may need:

libffi6
libblas
liblapack
libgsl
libRmath

and the corresponding -dev packages.

  1. if needed, install quicklisp (http://www.quicklisp.org)
  2. if wanted, install git (http://www.git-scm.org/)
  3. Use git to fetch common-lisp-statistics from the repository: git://github.com/blindglobe/common-lisp-stat.git and put it into your quicklisp local-projects directory (you will need to put a few more projects there as well), OR make sure you have an internet connection and go to step 5 and fetch a not-so-bleeding-edge version from QuickLisp.

    We suggest something like:

mkdir ~/quicklisp/
mkdir ~/quicklisp/local-projects
cd ~/quicklisp/local-projects
git clone git://github.com/blindglobe/common-lisp-stat.git
git clone git://github.com/blindglobe/lisp-matrix.git

(with the 5th and on lines representing stuff undergoing rapid change, so possibly out of date on QUICKLISP).

You might need to grab XARRAY as well, and if behind a firewall, might need to use HTTP or similar alternative transport.

  1. Start up the Common Lisp implementation, and:
(ql:register-local-projects)
(ql:quickload :antik)
(ql:quickload :cls)

TODO: Unfortunately, it looks like ANTIK needs to be preloaded, or it gets confused. I don’t yet know why.

  1. get coffee, tea, water, beer, or a glass of wine, review the Common Lisp Statistics mailing list, chat with friends, etc, until it is done compiling and loading.
  2. Report success/failure back to the news group ( https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/lisp-stat ) or directly to Tony Rossini mail, i.e. ( mailto:blindglobe@gmail.com ) if you don’t want to be public about it.
  3. Start trying it out. The examples/ directory is a good place to start evaluating the files, one at a time. Preferrably in order!

More details can be fond in the subsequent sections.

Common Lisp

Current requirements are basically that you have a Common Lisp implementation such as SBCL or CCL (though CLISP might work) and BLAS/LAPACK on your system.

SBCL and CCL are in active use by developers. We are interested in finding out details regarding successes with other distributions and would be pleased to add such information here.

Microsoft Windows

Currently, LispCabinet would be the simplest way to get started, with either SBCL or CCL as the Lisp Implementation. Need experiences from others using

http://lispcabinet.sourceforge.net/

Linux

Most distributions contain SBCL or CLISP. The instructions for getting and installing CCL are relatively straightforward.

MacOSX

Both CCL and SBCL have been remarked to work. CCL seems to be preferred on this platform?

Configuring BLAS/LAPACK libraries locations

Currently this is a manual operation, which will change in a later version.

Edit the file external/cl-blapack/load-blapack-libs.lisp

Search for the following 3 parameters

  • gfortran-lib
  • blas-lib
  • lapack-lib

You need to check that your dynamic library path has been properly set up in the shell, by setting up your .bashrc (or equivalent shell init file, or equivalent environment variable settings).

[#A] Setting up BLAS/LAPACK on Microsoft OS

i.e. compilation environment and tools, if needed, on Microsoft Windows?

For windows, we recommend you use cygwin to get straightforward access. I’ll document the steps if there is a demand.

Linux

Get lapack-dev, blas-dev from your Linux distribution.

i.e., something like:

sudo apt-get install libblas
sudo apt-get install liblapack

For Linux, if installed in a weird place, you need to make sure the loader looks for it.

set LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:???

and need to replace the ???

SBCL is known to work (0.58+, 1.1.1+)

CCL is thought to work

(CMUCL and CLISP may work, but not tested)

MacOSX

For Mac OSX set

export DYLD_FALLBACK-LIBRARY_PATH=$DYLD_FALLBACK_LIBRARY_PATH:/opt/local/lib

FIXME: Tony has no clue, please fill this in since most mailing list folks use Macs.

  • CCL is thought to work
  • SBCL is known to work

For OS X: change the parameters as suggested in the file. Both BLAS and LAPACK are pre installed on Mac OSX.

Install Quicklisp

LispCabinet has it preinstalled, and you can use that version to upgrade

Debian/Ubuntu also allow you access to a (possibly outdated) version. Not sure about upgrade potential.

On Linux and MacOSX, I would recommend using the instructions at the QuickLisp www site (http://www.quicklisp.org).

Install Git

Unfortunately, as much as we really would like to get rid of this PITA stage, we are pre-alpha, and that means no chance, unless you want to fix your own bugs and copy/paste fixes, etc. Much simpler to figure out a small bit of git.

Hopefully, your distribution (Linux) has it, and instructions for getting it, along with tutorials and documentation, can be found for MacOSX and Microsoft Windows on http://www.git-scm.org/

GitHub also has a Microsoft Windows application that might be useful for fetching and working with GitHub repositories (including this one).

for mac osx

sudo port install git

for linux

Using Debian, Ubuntu, or other apt-get based distributions as an example:

sudo apt-get install git

Using git to fetch Common Lisp Statistics

At this stage, we need to identify where you will put the D/L’d package. If you are have an existing, highly tuned quicklisp setup, please figure it out and jump to the next stage, but basically you need to pull common-lisp-stat from Blindglobe’s repository, along with a few others.

cd ~/quicklisp/local-projects/
git clone https://github.com/blindglobe/common-lisp-stat.git

Regarding the “few others”, all of them are currently part of QuickLisp, so you only need them if you want to develop with them. Which isn’t entirely a bad idea.

These would include:

lisp-matrixCLSgeneric interface to BLAS and LAPACK using matrix like API
cl-blapacklisp-matrixBLAS / LAPACK FFI
fnvlisp-matrixforiegn-numeric-vectors, C-storage for lisp-matrix
ffalisp-matrixforiegn-??-arrays, LISP storage for lisp-matrix
liftCLSunit-testing
listoflistCLSlist as an array data structure
xarray

Compile and load dependencies.

Start up your Common Lisp implementation and type in:

(ql:register-local-projects)
(ql:quickload :cls)

Retire for a well earned coffee and upon your return you should find the package completely installed. Obviously, potential errors can creep in with spelling the filenames correctly, so be careful.

And now, everything should be working. This is the case for at least one person, so data on failures is very welcome.

Start trying it out

Now, load into your IDE or lisp, the files in the examples directory, such as:

00-loadingData.lisp
02-DSVloading.lisp
04-dataManipulation.lisp
10-basicEDA.lisp
20-visual-2d-cairo2.lisp
50-TTestExample.lisp
60-regressionExamples.lisp
linear-regression.lisp
ls-demo.lisp
ls-demo-ls1.lisp
XX-readMe.lisp

And more

Example Usage steps

Load the example lisp files

change directory into the CommonLispStat working directory.

This is just for directory convenience, not for any real reason.

cd ~/quicklisp/local-projects

start your lisp

sbcl

or

CCL

follow the commands in the ls-demo.lisp (need to add link) file, i.e.

(ql:quickload :cls)

(in-package :cls)

Initially we will work in the cls package as all the basic functions we would need are present

For serious work we would create our own workspace and save it in a separate package, but for now we will take this short cut.

(normal-rand 20)
(setf mytest (normal-rand 20))

and see if they work (basic CFFI functionality for external C library, LIFT package for unit-testing framework to ensure run time stability).

Setup a place to work

In Common Lisp, you need to select and setup namespace to store data and functions. There is a scratch user-package, or sandbox, for CLS, cls-user , which you can select via:

(in-package :cls-user)

and this has some basic modules from CLS instantiated (dataframes, probability calculus, numerical linear algebra, basic summaries (numerical and visual displays).

However, it can be better is to create a package to work in, which pulls in only desired functionality:

(in-package :cl-user)
(defpackage :my-package-user
  (:documentation "demo of how to put serious work should be placed in
    a similar package elsewhere for reproducibility.  This hints as to
    what needs to be done for a user- or analysis-package.")
  (:nicknames :my-clswork-user)
  (:use :common-lisp ; always needed for user playgrounds!
        :lisp-matrix ; we only need the packages that we need...
        :common-lisp-statistics
        :cl-variates
        :lisp-stat-data-examples) ;; this ensures access to a data package
  (:shadowing-import-from :lisp-stat
      ;; This is needed temporarily until we resolve the dependency and call structure. 
      call-method call-next-method

      expt + - * / ** mod rem abs 1+ 1- log exp sqrt sin cos tan
      asin acos atan sinh cosh tanh asinh acosh atanh float random
      truncate floor ceiling round minusp zerop plusp evenp oddp 
      < <= = /= >= > > ;; complex
      conjugate realpart imagpart phase
      min max logand logior logxor lognot ffloor fceiling
      ftruncate fround signum cis

      <= float imagpart)

  (:export summarize-data summarize-results this-data this-report))

(in-package :my-clswork-user) ;; or :my-package-user

(setf my-data
      (let ((var1 )) ))

We need to pull in the packages with data or functions that we need; just because the data/function is pulled in by another package, in that package’s namespace, does NOT mean it is available in this name space. However, the common-lisp-statistics package will ensure that fundamental objects and functions are always available.

Get to work [0/3]

Pull in or create data

Summarize results

Save work and results for knowledge building and reuse

One can build a package, or save an image (CL implementation dependent), or save text files.

Inform moi of problems or successes

mailto:blindglobe@gmail.com if there is anything wrong, or even if something happens to work.

Current beliefs:

  • SBCL is target platform. CCL and CMUCL should be similar.
  • CLISP is finicky regarding the problems that we have with CFFI conversation. In particular that we can not really do typing that we need to take care of. I think this is my (Tony’s) problem, not someone elses, and specifically, not CLISP’s
  • Need to test ECL.

Introduction

Core Philosophy

“Languages shape how we …” Need to get and insert this quote that Duncan Temple-Lang found.

The API should distinguish between the realization and the statistical interpretation. Goal is to teach statisticians how to think “systems-computationally”, and programmers, comp-sci types, informaticists and other “data scientists” how to think “statistically”, in order to get a jump on the competition.

The goal of this system is to promote a change in thinking, to move the data analysis approach, currently stuck in a mix of 70s-early 90s approaches, into a new generation/level.

Design Philosophy

The approach we are taking is one where we provide a general method, and some fundamental building blocks, but don’t force users into approaches in order to allow for experimentation.

DSL’s should be built on top of the core packages, as needed or wanted.

(TonyR:) The DSL I want to build is a verbose statistically precise computing language, but we need quality code underneathe (which others could use for specialized terse DSL’s).

DSL: domain specific language.

History

See files in file:Doc/ for history, design considerations, and random, sometimes false and misleading, musings.

XLispStat

ViSta

ARC

Common LispStat

Initial development, 1989 time frame, partially developed during a visit by Luke Tierney to Bell Labs.

Common Lisp Statistics

This system.

Local modifications, Development, Contributions

Since this project is

git clone git://github.com/blindglobe/common-lisp-stat.git 
cd common-lisp-stat

will pull the whole repository, and create a “master” branch to work on. If you are making edits, which I’d like, you don’t want to use the master branch, but more to use a topic-centric branch, so you might:

git checkout -b myTopicBranch

and then work on myTopicBranch, pulling back to the master branch when needed by

git checkout master
git pull . myTopicBranch

(or

git rebase myTopicBranch

)

BETTER DOCUMENTATION EXAMPLES EXIST ON-LINE (on the git WWW site mentioned above)!! PLEASE READ THEM, THE ABOVE IS SPARSE AND MIGHT BE OUTDATED!

Contributing through GitHub

Alternatively, one can work on the github repositories as well. They are a bit differently organized, and require one to get a github account and work from there.

basically, fork the repository on github on the WWW interface, then make a branch (as below), push back the branch to github, and notify the main repository that there is something to be pulled. And we’ll pull it back in.

Commiting with the MOB on repo.or.cz

of course, perhaps you want to contribute to the mob branch. For that, after cloning the repository as above, you would:

git checkout -b mob remotes/origin/mob

(work, work, work… through a cycle of

       <edit>
	 git add <files just edited>
	 git commit -m "what I just did"

ad-nauseum. When ready to commit, then just:

git push git+ssh://mob@repo.or.cz/srv/git/CommonLispStat.git mob:mob

)

and it’ll be put on the mob branch, as a proposal for merging.

Another approach would be to pull from the topic branch into the mob branch before uploading. Will work on a formal example soon.

(the basic principle is that instead of the edit cycle on mob, do something like:

git checkout mob
git pull . myTopicBranch   
git push git+ssh://mob@repo.or.cz/srv/git/CommonLispStat.git mob:mob

)

Licensing

We currently are using and recommend the MIT style license approach.

Footnotes

[fn:1] I´m not including instructions for Emacs or git, as the former is dealt with other places and the latter was required for you to get this. Since disk space is cheap, I´m intentionally forcing git to be part of this system. Sorry if you hate it. Org-mode, org-babel, and org-babel-lisp, and hypo are useful for making this file a literate and interactively executable piece of work.

About

Common Lisp Statistics -- based on LispStat (Tierney) but updated for Common Lisp and incorporating lessons from R (http://www.r-project.org/). See the google group for lisp stat / common lisp statistics for a mailing list.

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