I think there's two reasons. First, I created a grid where I only used one weather station in a certain area (I forget how coarse I made the grid) and so if there's a jagged edge on the boarder of the continent, it will look weird. Second, not everywhere is equally sampled. There might be regions with no weather stations whereas the US has a lot. Thanks for watching! 🤓
Hi.Sorry,i have a question. I need to upload all the files (.txt) at once, and from each file to another file (.csv) pull out a specific column. I will be glad if you help me.
Once again, fantastic instruction! Appreciate your dedication in making this content universally available. I am a fan of code club!
Thanks Jason! Let me know if there’s anything you’re looking for that you work with
I love your videos. I have learned a lot from you!!! Thanks for sharing the knowledge
My pleasure Johanna! Thanks for watching 🤓
Amazing. So much information!!! floor, case_when function, especially facet_wrap and facet_grid. Before i don't really know the difference.
Wonderful - thanks for watching! I'm glad you're finding these so useful
Hi,
Thanks for the video. Very useful to me since I'm new to R. I have a question though: how to convert to Robinson projection?
Thanks
Muito bom, aprendi muito. Obrigado
Hi! In your opinion, how come the geographical boundaries, especially in the case of Africa, are imprecise?
I think there's two reasons. First, I created a grid where I only used one weather station in a certain area (I forget how coarse I made the grid) and so if there's a jagged edge on the boarder of the continent, it will look weird. Second, not everywhere is equally sampled. There might be regions with no weather stations whereas the US has a lot. Thanks for watching! 🤓
Hi.Sorry,i have a question. I need to upload all the files (.txt) at once, and from each file to another file (.csv) pull out a specific column. I will be glad if you help me.
Sorry but I don’t have the availability to do one on one consultations like you are looking for