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05-09-2017, 03:40 PM | #133 | |
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R has clear added value to a company over excel and the learning curve is at an all time low with the availability of dozens of free courses that teach basic data analysis and reporting. On top of that, open source contributors such as Hadley continue to generate libraries containing high level functions that decrease complexity and increase functionality. |
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05-09-2017, 05:13 PM | #134 | |
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1. As stated in here, learning curve. Everyone knows Excel. Your upper level managers that like to dink with results, accounting, actuarial, and even IT all use Excel so it is not just a one department shift since everything gets handed off to someone. 2. Legacy work. You would not believe the number of legacy spreadsheets, models, processes, etc that are in Excel. To remake all of those is by itself a reason it is impractical. 3. Compatibility. I am less familiar with this but I would assume that there are not easy ways to export into all of the programs that are used by each division of a company. 4. Most important for last... control. There is this acronym that a lot of people hate, SOX. It pretty much means that you have to be able to control and validate all of the results you get. You cannot just rely on an open source piece of code that joe shmo put together to get you fancy results. THIS is the reason companies use more expensive, less capable programs. 4.5. Another reason people use more expensive and less capable programs is because of the support network. If there is a major problem running on a remote server or grid then there is an external party that you are already paying to fix it. This would be more convoluted with R (although possible and just as expensive probably if you just employed the right people in house)
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05-09-2017, 07:50 PM | #135 | |
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1) Never stated for management to learn R, thats just silly to even think. There is a great feature called "EXPORT AS CSV/XLSX, etc..." which is the universal document for data. 2) Having business critical processes in the form of a spreadsheet just sounds insane to me. You have the same mindset that prevents progress, which is "ohh man, thats sounds difficult. Lets not do it." 3) See point 1 4) Not sure what SOX means but I can tell you this... plenty of the technology you use every day originated from an open source project. 4.5) You are right, but at the same time I have dealt with Microsoft support, enterprise and personal and have been disappointed with both. |
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05-10-2017, 12:17 PM | #136 | |
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05-10-2017, 12:37 PM | #137 | |
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Also, to your point 1: CSV is just a delimited file. It doesn't imply using Excel, it is simply an easy way to move around data in files. |
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05-10-2017, 03:53 PM | #138 |
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Yeah - I make pipe delimited files as deliverables all the time for my weird IT friends
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