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CAS RPM: Installing & running Rattle in RStudio

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At the Ratemaking and Product Management (RPM) seminar of the Casualty Actuarial Society (CAS) in San Diego last month, Linda Brobeck, Peggy Brinkmann, and yours truly gave a concurrent session on a machine learning technique called decision tree analysis. See the DSPA-2 session — and other sessions — at this link. Technical issues precluded showing the video of  installing and running Rattle within RStudio. Thus this post.

As Peggy notes, installing and running Rattle takes only three “commands” in R:
  install.packages(“rattle”, dependencies=c(‘Depends’, “Suggests”))< o:p>
  library(rattle)< o:p>
  rattle()

Although not necessary, the “Suggests” option above can avoid Rattle’s annoying requests for more packages as you click through its GUI; the downside is the time to download and install about 900 packages. Below (“Read more >>”) is a link to a video of me running through the three lines above:

download/install Rattle
< o:p>

For those whose IT departments restrict installing R and RStudio on company equipment, this presentation used the software on a USB drive. The first minute or so of the video shows me setting up the shortcut on the USB drive so RStudio runs without a bunch of confusing questions, especially for a newbie. If you have R and RStudio installed on your computer already, you can fast forward through the first minute. 
< o:p>

Peggy put her three lines of code into a script called ‘Rattle.R’. That’s the file I double-click around the 1:10 mark. You can see the three lines of the script in the upper left pane of RStudio. < o:p>

I run the first line starting at 8:17 am, which finishes at 9:32 am (the 1:42 mark in the video). Plenty of time to read the newspaper.< o:p>

Then I run the second line which, despite the “Depends” and “Suggests” settings above, has to download and install yet another package, GTK+. (There are reasons why that’s necessary, but not important right now.) That takes just a few minutes.< o:p>

Then I run the third line, which fires up the Rattle user interface (GUI). It’s a little hard to see, but the Rattle GUI shows up as another process running in the taskbar.< o:p>

At this point you can start using rattle/rpart per Peggy’s presentation. The links to our three presentations are reproduced here for convenience:< o:p>
   Linda Brobeck
   Peggy Brinkmann
   Dan Murphy


Contact me if questions.< o:p>

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