I have been looking for some good statistics package for Common Lisp, that should be both stable and efficient. There is lhstats, but it doesn't have much documentation and it's not currently maintained. So what is the preferred way for statistics programming in Common Lisp (I'm using SBCL)? I'm looking for a package with advanced statistical functions, such as SEM (structural equation modeling), canonical correlations, GLM (general linear model) etc., but also even very basic but stable and well-documented statistical packages would be useful. Calling R statistical functions from Common Lisp would also be one option. What do you recommend?
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3Why does it have to be Common Lisp? I think you will find R not very hard to learn coming from a Lisp background, and that way you won't be trying to reinvent the wheel....– Ari B. FriedmanMay 6, 2012 at 14:55
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2Yes, I was actually thinking of R, it has very good statistical functions and and I know the the basics of R syntax. I was looking for a Common Lisp solution, because it's more suitable for general-purpose programming IMHO, but maybe it's good to use R for statistics anyway, through RCL or RCLG.– nrzMay 6, 2012 at 15:03
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6I think, if you find a good Common Lisp solution, you shouldn't go for R, just because it's common to use it for statistics. There's also an interesting article from R creator on the topic of Lisp use for stats: stat.auckland.ac.nz/~ihaka/downloads/Compstat-2008.pdf But if you'll decide to use R, you might want to look at swankr (a SWANK backend for R): common-lisp.net/~crhodes/swankr– Vsevolod DyomkinMay 6, 2012 at 15:47
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3@VsevolodDyomkin: I have read that article before and mostly I agree with it. Especially the issues of lack of multi-threading and relative numerical inefficiency of R when compared to Common Lisp are big issues for intensive numerical calculations, and for that reason using R for intensive numerical calculations is not an attractive option. For numerically non-intensive statistics using R does fine.– nrzMay 6, 2012 at 16:35
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5common-lisp-stat is developed, just slowly. Personal challenges with the family have slowed me down. But I'm happy to take questions at [email protected].– user1643706Sep 3, 2012 at 12:14
4 Answers
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I was thinking of this option too, but then met some difficulties with installation: I used
git clone
to get the repository and did according to the Fast Start instructions, but then I get error:"Component :RSM-STRING not found, required by #<SYSTEM "cls">"
. So I need rsm-string, and it's not available by using(ql:system-apropos "rsm")
(common-lisp-stat
isn't either, for that matter). So how should I installrsm-string
to be able to usecommon-lisp-stat
?– nrzMay 6, 2012 at 16:23 -
2you can get it (as well as another dependency: listoflists) and install manually from the same author's github account github.com/blindglobe. And you;ll also need cldoc from github.com/danlentz/cldoc (just like in the old days :) And you'll also need libgfortran3, libblas and liblapack. May 6, 2012 at 18:26
The GNU Scientific Library has statistics functions and is accessible from GNU Scientific Library for Lisp.
I think I would go with lhstat, it may not be maintained anymore, but the same thing seems true for common-lisp-stat (last commit is 1 year old), and at least it is available through Quicklisp. Moreover, maybe those packages aren't maintained because they're good enough.
You can also try RCL a FFI binding of R which is also quickloadable.
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@VsevolodDyomkin: How do you know? Though even if it's maintained I would go with something quickloadable if it fits my needs, unless there is another system which far better (but then I would probably try to add it to Quicklisp).– DaimrodMay 6, 2012 at 23:15
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1I see the activity of its mainatiner on github. But surely the system should get into quicklisp (it actually is present in github.com/quicklisp/quicklisp-projects, but somehow not available). Probably we should file an issue to blindglobe (and xach) to make it available. May 7, 2012 at 5:13
I only know of it by name, but look here http://incanter.org/
It calls itself "a Clojure-based, R-like platform for statistical computing and graphics." Where clojure is a variant of common lisp.
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1Interesting. Clojure is a variant of Lisp (as are Common Lisp, Scheme and Emacs Lisp etc.) but AFAIK it doesn't comply with Common Lisp ANSI standard and IMHO it is also too different from it to be considered a variant of common Lisp (however I haven't tried Clojure yet).– nrzMay 6, 2012 at 18:10
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8Clojure isn't a variant of Common Lisp. It's a separate language, with Lisp-like syntax, based on Java and the functional paradigm. May 6, 2012 at 18:44
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1Agree with other comments that Clojure isn't Common Lisp. I would add though that Incanter is pretty good - I've used it very effectively for data visualizations and it's well worth considering if the requirement is Lisp in general rather than specifically Common Lisp– mikeraMay 16, 2012 at 7:16