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npRmpi (version 0.60-20)

cps71: Canadian High School Graduate Earnings

Description

Canadian cross-section wage data consisting of a random sample taken from the 1971 Canadian Census Public Use Tapes for male individuals having common education (grade 13). There are 205 observations in total.

Usage

data("cps71")

Arguments

Format

A data frame with 2 columns, and 205 rows.

logwage

the first column, of type numeric

age

the second column, of type integer

References

Pagan, A. and A. Ullah (1999), Nonparametric Econometrics, Cambridge University Press.

Examples

Run this code
if (FALSE) {
## Not run in checks: excluded to keep MPI examples stable and check times short.
## The following example is adapted for interactive parallel execution
## in R. Here we spawn 1 slave so that there will be two compute nodes
## (master and slave). Kindly see the batch examples in the demos
## directory (npRmpi/demos) and study them carefully. Also kindly see
## the more extensive examples in the np package itself. See the npRmpi
## vignette for further details on running parallel np programs via
## vignette("npRmpi",package="npRmpi").

## Start npRmpi for interactive execution. If slaves are already running and
## `options(npRmpi.reuse.slaves=TRUE)` (default on some systems), this will
## reuse the existing pool instead of respawning. To change the number of
## slaves, call `npRmpi.stop(force=TRUE)` then restart.
npRmpi.start(nslaves=1)

data("cps71")
mpi.bcast.Robj2slave(cps71)

attach(cps71)

plot(age, logwage, xlab="Age", ylab="log(wage)")

detach(cps71)

## For the interactive run only we close the slaves perhaps to proceed
## with other examples and so forth. This is redundant in batch mode.

## Note: on some systems (notably macOS+MPICH), repeatedly spawning and
## tearing down slaves in the same R session can lead to hangs/crashes.
## npRmpi may therefore keep slave daemons alive by default and
## `npRmpi.stop()` performs a "soft close". Use `force=TRUE` to
## actually shut down the slaves.
##
## You can disable reuse via `options(npRmpi.reuse.slaves=FALSE)` or by
## setting the environment variable `NP_RMPI_NO_REUSE_SLAVES=1` before
## loading the package.

npRmpi.stop()               ## soft close (may keep slaves alive)
## npRmpi.stop(force=TRUE)  ## hard close

## Note that in order to exit npRmpi properly avoid quit(), and instead
## use mpi.quit() as follows.

## mpi.bcast.cmd(mpi.quit(),
##               caller.execute=TRUE)
} 

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