@Bibtex-file{Misc/s-plus.bib,
  title =        "Bibliography on the {S} and {S}-Plus statistics
                 programming languages",
  author =       "Nelson H. F. Beebe",
  email =        "beebe at math.utah.edu, beebe at acm.org, beebe at
                 computer.org",
  address =      "Center for Scientific Computing\\ University of
                 Utah\\
                 Department of Mathematics, 110 LCB\\ 155 S 1400 E RM
                 233\\ Salt Lake City, UT 84112-0090\\ USA",
  supported =    "yes",
  keywords =     "bibliography, R, S, S-Plus, statistics",
  abstract =     "This is a bibliography on the S and S-Plus statistics
                 programming languages.",
  readme =       "The vendor World-Wide Web site is now at \par
                 http://www.insightful.com/splus \par Recently, a
                 freely-distributable reimplementation of S-Plus, called
                 R, has been developed; for details, see the World-Wide
                 Web locations \par http://lib.stat.cmu.edu/R
                 http://lib.stat.cmu.edu/R/CRAN/doc/FAQ/R-FAQ.html \par
                 There is also a useful site at \par
                 http://franz.stat.wisc.edu \par which ``offers North
                 American mirrors of several sites of interest to
                 statisticians: \par Comprehensive R Archive Network
                 (CRAN) \par R, a language described by its creators
                 Ross Ihaka and Robert Gentleman as `not unlike S', is
                 freely available under the terms of the GNU Public
                 License. The source for Unix, Windows or Macintosh
                 systems is available. Compiled binaries are available
                 for Debian Linux, RedHat Linux, Windows or Macintosh
                 systems. \par Modern Applied Statistics with S-PLUS
                 \par Description and support files for the second
                 edition of the classic book by Bill Venables and Brian
                 Ripley. \par Emacs Speaks Statistics \par An enhanced
                 and extended version of S-mode for GNU emacs or xemacs.
                 \par PSPP \par A free, compatible replacement for the
                 statistical package SPSS. PSPP was originally called
                 Fiasco. \par Local Projects: \par Mixed-Effects Models
                 in S \par A library for S-PLUS (and perhaps other
                 dialects of S) developed by Jose Pinheiro and Douglas
                 Bates. \par Current Index to Statistics Client/Server
                 \par Software for client/server access to the Current
                 Index to Statistics.'' \par There are electronic
                 archives of S-related reports at: \par
                 http://netlib.att.com/cm/ms/departments/sia/doc/index.html
                 http://netlib.att.com/cm/ms/departments/sia/jmc
                 http://netlib.bell-labs.com/cm/ms/departments/sia/project/trellis/index.html
                 \par There is a frequently-asked questions list at:
                 \par http://www.stat.mat.ethz.ch/S-FAQ \par There is an
                 S-News mailing list at \par s-news at
                 utstat.toronto.edu \par Subscription requests should go
                 to \par s-news-request at utstat.toronto.edu \par This
                 bibliography has been collected from the author's
                 personal bibliography files, from the very large
                 computer science bibliography collection on
                 ftp.ira.uka.de in /pub/bibliography to which many
                 people of have contributed, and from several
                 Internet-accessible library catalogs, notably those of
                 the University of California, Stanford University,
                 Library of Congress, and OCLC. \par At version 1.05
                 [05-Feb-1996], a search of the OCLC Article1st database
                 resulted in the addition of only 5 new references; it
                 appears that relatively little mention is being made in
                 current literature about this programming system. \par
                 BibTeX citation tags are uniformly chosen as
                 name:year:abbrev, where name is the family name of the
                 first author or editor, year is a 4-digit number, and
                 abbrev is a 3-letter condensation of important title
                 words. Citation tags were automatically generated by
                 software developed for the BibNet Project. \par In this
                 bibliography, entries are sorted first by ascending
                 year, and within each year, alphabetically by author or
                 editor, and then, if necessary, by the 3-letter
                 abbreviation at the end of the BibTeX citation tag,
                 using the ``bibsort -byyear'' utility. Year order has
                 been chosen to make it easier to identify the most
                 recent work.",
}
