cau
, exp
, gam
, gev
, glo
, gno
, gpa
,
gum
, kap
, kur
, ln3
, nor
, pe3
, ray
, revgum
, rice
, texp
, wak
, and wei
. If the distribution type is not identified, then the function issues a warning, but goes ahead and creates the parameter list and of course can not check for the validity of the parameters.vec2par(vec, type, nowarn=FALSE, paracheck=TRUE, ...)
type='gev'
).TRUE
then options(warn=-1)
is made and restored on return. This switch is to permit calls in which warnings are not desired as the user knows how to handle the returned value---say in aare.par.valid
call that is made internally.list
is returned. This list should contain at least the following items, but some distributions such as the revgum
have extra.type=revgum
)) or Generalized Pareto (type=gpa
) , which are two-parameter or three-parameter distributions, the third or fourth value in the vector is the $\zeta$ of the distribution. $\zeta$ represents the fraction of the sample that is noncensored, or number of observed (noncensored) values divided by the sample size. The $\zeta$ represents censoring on the right, that is there are unknown observations above a threshold or the largest observed sample. Consultation of parrevgum
or pargpaRC
should elucidate the censoring discussion.lmom2par
para <- vec2par(c(12,123,0.5),'gev')
Q <- quagev(0.5,para)
my.custom <- vec2par(c(2,2),'myowndist') # Rice distribution
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