Compose an S Function to Compute X beta from a Fit
Function
is a class of functions for creating other S functions.
Function.rms
is the method for creating S functions to compute
X beta, based on a model fitted with rms
in effect.
Like latexrms
, Function.rms
simplifies restricted cubic
spline functions and factors out terms in second-order interactions.
Function.rms
will not work for models that have third-order
interactions involving restricted cubic splines.
Function.cph
is a particular method for handling fits from
cph
, for which an intercept (the negative of the centering
constant) is added to
the model. sascode
is a function that takes an S function such
as one created by Function
and does most of the editing
to turn the function definition into
a fragment of SAS code for computing X beta from the fitted model, along
with assignment statements that initialize predictors to reference
values.
perlcode
similarly creates Perl code to evaluate a fitted
regression model.
## S3 method for class 'rms' Function(object, intercept=NULL, digits=max(8, .Options$digits), posterior.summary=c('mean', 'median', 'mode'), ...) ## S3 method for class 'cph' Function(object, intercept=-object$center, ...) # Use result as fun(predictor1=value1, predictor2=value2, \dots) sascode(object, file='', append=FALSE) perlcode(object)
object |
a fit created with |
intercept |
an intercept value to use (not allowed to be specified to |
digits |
number of significant digits to use for coefficients and knot locations |
posterior.summary |
if using a Bayesian model fit such as from
|
file |
name of a file in which to write the SAS code. Default is to write to standard output. |
append |
set to |
... |
arguments to pass to |
Function
returns an S-Plus function that can be invoked in any
usual context. The function has one argument per predictor variable,
and the default values of the predictors are set to adjust-to
values
(see datadist
). Multiple predicted X beta values may be calculated
by specifying vectors as arguments to the created function.
All non-scalar argument values must have the same length.
perlcode
returns a character string with embedded newline characters.
Frank Harrell, Jeremy Stephens, and Thomas Dupont
Department of Biostatistics
Vanderbilt University
fh@fharrell.com
suppressWarnings(RNGversion("3.5.0")) set.seed(1331) x1 <- exp(rnorm(100)) x2 <- factor(sample(c('a','b'),100,rep=TRUE)) dd <- datadist(x1, x2) options(datadist='dd') y <- log(x1)^2+log(x1)*(x2=='b')+rnorm(100)/4 f <- ols(y ~ pol(log(x1),2)*x2) f$coef g <- Function(f, digits=5) g sascode(g) cat(perlcode(g), '\n') g() g(x1=c(2,3), x2='b') #could omit x2 since b is default category predict(f, expand.grid(x1=c(2,3),x2='b')) g8 <- Function(f) # default is 8 sig. digits g8(x1=c(2,3), x2='b') options(datadist=NULL) ## Not run: # Make self-contained functions for computing survival probabilities # using a log-normal regression f <- psm(Surv(d.time, death) ~ rcs(age,4)*sex, dist='gaussian') g <- Function(f) surv <- Survival(f) # Compute 2 and 5-year survival estimates for 50 year old male surv(c(2,5), g(age=50, sex='male')) ## End(Not run)
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