How to set a random seed in R for pseudo-random number generation. Thanks for watching!! ❤️ Tip Jar 👉🏻👈🏻 ☕️ ko-fi.com/math... ♫ Eric Skiff - Chibi Ninja freemusicarchiv...
I’m paying $4,000 for two graduate courses this semester... and I constantly learn more from a $9.99 course on Udemy and from wonderful folks like you on RU-vid. Thank you and God Bless!
why can't some people speak in clear and easy-to-understand language! Thank you for explaining this in a manner that i don't have always look up what it meant
many thanks for the quick and clear explanation - especially grateful about the comment at the end - I was exactly looking for the info whether it lasts for the whole session or not
I'm still slightly confused but I'd like to know why you chose 18989 for your seed. That's a very specific number. Why not 20000? Or 30000? or 5? or 10000000?
Thanks. I've been trying to figure out why all my statistics examples start with set.seed and why there is a weird arbitrary number (1234) connected to it.
Hi. This video is really helpful and could clarify the set.seed() function. However, do you mind explaining more why and what number should be set as a seed number. How do you come up with 18989?
@@rp2546 the key point is to reuse the same "seed number" in order to get the same pseudorandom output. The number that you use is not important. The relationship is just that that seed produces the same values from rnorm, in this example