Hi,
To show how Moose can support the analysis of various data sets, I am looking for a case study containing a complex data structure that does not represent a software system, and a set of questions associated with it. Ideally, the data should be freely available and it should contain a set of entities with various properties and various relationships with other entities.
Anyone has any idea regarding such a case study?
Cheers, Doru
-- www.tudorgirba.com
"There are no old things, there are only old ways of looking at them."
Hi Doru!
I like swimming. Swimovate is a watch that makes a geek swimmer happy: it records set and provides numerous data. Data is structured as a tree, not really a graph, even thought this is not impossible to find a graph structure. I worked on analyzing swimming sets in moose. I haven't released the code yet. Does this go in what you're asking for?
Cheers, Alexandre
Le 4 sept. 2011 à 19:46, Tudor Girba tudor@tudorgirba.com a écrit :
Hi,
To show how Moose can support the analysis of various data sets, I am looking for a case study containing a complex data structure that does not represent a software system, and a set of questions associated with it. Ideally, the data should be freely available and it should contain a set of entities with various properties and various relationships with other entities.
Anyone has any idea regarding such a case study?
Cheers, Doru
-- www.tudorgirba.com
"There are no old things, there are only old ways of looking at them."
Moose-dev mailing list Moose-dev@iam.unibe.ch https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev
On 5 sept. 2011, at 01:46, Tudor Girba wrote:
Hi,
To show how Moose can support the analysis of various data sets, I am looking for a case study containing a complex data structure that does not represent a software system, and a set of questions associated with it. Ideally, the data should be freely available and it should contain a set of entities with various properties and various relationships with other entities.
Anyone has any idea regarding such a case study?
A classic is analysis of "grouping/following" in orienteering, based on split times for each leg and each runner.
http://news.worldofo.com/2006/10/06/wc-one-two-three-many/ http://news.worldofo.com/2008/05/29/grouping-runners-eoc-long-final/
-- Simon Denier
Links and links with datasets: http://kevinchai.net/datasets
On Mon, Sep 5, 2011 at 1:46 AM, Tudor Girba tudor@tudorgirba.com wrote:
Hi,
To show how Moose can support the analysis of various data sets, I am looking for a case study containing a complex data structure that does not represent a software system, and a set of questions associated with it. Ideally, the data should be freely available and it should contain a set of entities with various properties and various relationships with other entities.
Anyone has any idea regarding such a case study?
Cheers, Doru
-- www.tudorgirba.com
"There are no old things, there are only old ways of looking at them."
Moose-dev mailing list Moose-dev@iam.unibe.ch https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev
Thanks, Andre. I will take a look.
Cheers, Doru
On 21 Sep 2011, at 23:22, Andre Hora wrote:
Links and links with datasets: http://kevinchai.net/datasets
On Mon, Sep 5, 2011 at 1:46 AM, Tudor Girba tudor@tudorgirba.com wrote: Hi,
To show how Moose can support the analysis of various data sets, I am looking for a case study containing a complex data structure that does not represent a software system, and a set of questions associated with it. Ideally, the data should be freely available and it should contain a set of entities with various properties and various relationships with other entities.
Anyone has any idea regarding such a case study?
Cheers, Doru
-- www.tudorgirba.com
"There are no old things, there are only old ways of looking at them."
Moose-dev mailing list Moose-dev@iam.unibe.ch https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev
-- Andre Hora
Moose-dev mailing list Moose-dev@iam.unibe.ch https://www.iam.unibe.ch/mailman/listinfo/moose-dev
-- www.tudorgirba.com
"We cannot reach the flow of things unless we let go."