
Functions of the distribution of the studentized range, pchisq
.
ptukey(q, nmeans, df, nranges = 1, lower.tail = TRUE, log.p = FALSE)
qtukey(p, nmeans, df, nranges = 1, lower.tail = TRUE, log.p = FALSE)
vector of quantiles.
vector of probabilities.
sample size for range (same for each group).
degrees of freedom for
number of groups whose maximum range is considered.
logical; if TRUE, probabilities p are given as log(p).
logical; if TRUE (default), probabilities are
ptukey
gives the distribution function and qtukey
its
inverse, the quantile function.
The length of the result is the maximum of the lengths of the
numerical arguments. The other numerical arguments are recycled
to that length. Only the first elements of the logical arguments
are used.
If nranges
is greater than one, nmeans
observations each.
Copenhaver, Margaret Diponzio and Holland, Burt S. (1988) Multiple comparisons of simple effects in the two-way analysis of variance with fixed effects. Journal of Statistical Computation and Simulation, 30, 1--15.
Odeh, R. E. and Evans, J. O. (1974) Algorithm AS 70: Percentage Points of the Normal Distribution. Applied Statistics 23, 96--97.
Distributions for standard distributions, including
pnorm
and qnorm
for the corresponding
functions for the normal distribution.
if(interactive())
curve(ptukey(x, nm = 6, df = 5), from = -1, to = 8, n = 101)
(ptt <- ptukey(0:10, 2, df = 5))
(qtt <- qtukey(.95, 2, df = 2:11))
## The precision may be not much more than about 8 digits:
summary(abs(.95 - ptukey(qtt, 2, df = 2:11)))
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab