dterpsss
SOHH OG Class 2004
Can I teach myself easily on udemy or do I need a real class? I want to get to an intermediate level for each, I want to start with the easiest one to digest, thoughts?
Dabbled in R a little bit. There is a package in R called Swirl (you can read about it on swirlstats.com) that teaches you how to use R inside of R. Very helpful.Can I teach myself easily on udemy or do I need a real class? I want to get to an intermediate level for each, I want to start with the easiest one to digest, thoughts?
I know R. The more statistics background you have, the more you're going to get out of it, as mentioned before. I haven't done anything with Tableau, but everything I've seen makes it seem like it's a colorful pivot table at the end of the day.
I honestly use more python/pandas/scikit-learn nowadays, but R is still good for more straightforward "mathy" problems.
To actually answer your question, it's really dependent on how much you leverage your existing stats knowledge. It's not a particularly hard language to learn, but to make full use of it, it's assumed you know why you need it instead of a more general language.
Im in Bschool trying to get an edgeIf you learn it, apply for health-care jobs
I've solved a lot of business problems for people in R.
how so? modeling?, aside from the extra skill on the resume solving business problems is really my motivation
If you can program and know C++ / Python; there is no real reason to know these languages anymore.
What type of business problems are you getting into?