I'm sure this has been asked before, and on the website all I can find is "tests on linux ongoing using wine emulator". Any further details? A mini-howto on how to give it a try, problems, plans, whatever?
I've also not found much on "epi6 (enter as in enter.exe) on Linux". Some people have tried it with dosemu and possibly dosbox but, again, I haven't been able to find information on how to do it. (I've tried it myself with some problems with the cursor and how the epi604es.exe uncompresses itself onto c:, not creating \epi6 or \netss.)
I don't know what finally happened to the idea of CDC releasing (as public domain or free-software of whatever flavour) whatever portions of Enter.exe they can release. I think there was a problem with some un-releasable libraries or something like it. Is that the same case with EpiData?
In time, what I'd really like to see is something as good (simple to use, flexible, and powerful) as EpiData on Linux. I don't know how far we are from that, if help could be looked for or organised somehow, or whatever.
I have written an epi6.py so as to READ, SELECT, FREQ, TABLES (2 dimensions), SUMFREQ and SUMTABLES (well, sort of) from a Python script. Of course some knowledgable experts will do it using R, but I'd like my scripts to be as cross-platform as Python itself. I haven't made it public (for lack of expertise on how to do such a thing) but it's available for anyone who wants it.
I've looked into other tools for creating questionnaires, and there's this OIO project using Zope, but that's overkill for small outbreaks and simple (as in simple data) research.
Epi6 and EpiData are simple excelent tools in my opinion. Thing is, I don't like to be dependant on any one operating system if I can avoid it.
Thanks for the great program. I know one shouldn't ask for more unless one is ready to offer one's own effort.
Lucas
______________________________________________ Yahoo! lanza su nueva tecnología de búsquedas ¿te atreves a comparar? http://busquedas.yahoo.es
I haven't tried this myself, but I'm told that if you install Xandros Linux or Lycoris Linux you should be able to run EpiData.
Xandros is a W2K look alike and Lycoris is an XP look alike. So, you can install which ever you are familiar with.
-- Tony Stewart
-----Original Message----- From: epidata-list-bounces@lists.umanitoba.ca [mailto:epidata-list-bounces@lists.umanitoba.ca] On Behalf Of epidata-list@lists.umanitoba.ca Sent: Monday, 26 July 2004 7:11 AM To: epidata-list@lists.umanitoba.ca Subject: [Epidata-list] epidata in linux
I'm sure this has been asked before, and on the website all I can find is "tests on linux ongoing using wine emulator". Any further details? A mini-howto on how to give it a try, problems, plans, whatever?
I've also not found much on "epi6 (enter as in enter.exe) on Linux". Some people have tried it with dosemu and possibly dosbox but, again, I haven't been able to find information on how to do it. (I've tried it myself with some problems with the cursor and how the epi604es.exe uncompresses itself onto c:, not creating \epi6 or \netss.)
I don't know what finally happened to the idea of CDC releasing (as public domain or free-software of whatever flavour) whatever portions of Enter.exe they can release. I think there was a problem with some un-releasable libraries or something like it. Is that the same case with EpiData?
In time, what I'd really like to see is something as good (simple to use, flexible, and powerful) as EpiData on Linux. I don't know how far we are from that, if help could be looked for or organised somehow, or whatever.
I have written an epi6.py so as to READ, SELECT, FREQ, TABLES (2 dimensions), SUMFREQ and SUMTABLES (well, sort of) from a Python script. Of course some knowledgable experts will do it using R, but I'd like my scripts to be as cross-platform as Python itself. I haven't made it public (for lack of expertise on how to do such a thing) but it's available for anyone who wants it.
I've looked into other tools for creating questionnaires, and there's this OIO project using Zope, but that's overkill for small outbreaks and simple (as in simple data) research.
Epi6 and EpiData are simple excelent tools in my opinion. Thing is, I don't like to be dependant on any one operating system if I can avoid it.
Thanks for the great program. I know one shouldn't ask for more unless one is ready to offer one's own effort.
Lucas
______________________________________________ Yahoo! lanza su nueva tecnología de búsquedas ¿te atreves a comparar? http://busquedas.yahoo.es _______________________________________________ Epidata-list mailing list Epidata-list@lists.umanitoba.ca http://lists.umanitoba.ca/mailman/listinfo/epidata-list
We have tested EpiData and test version of the coming EpiData Analysis in Wine running on Mandrake 9.2, and it seems to run OK. Haven't run heavy registering jobs though. Had a Linux specialist help me set up our system, it was straightforward in Mandrake graphic-interface admin tool.
On Mon, 26 Jul 2004 15:55:16 +1000, epidata-list wrote
I'm sure this has been asked before, and on the website all I can find is "tests on linux ongoing using wine emulator". Any further details? A mini-howto on how to give it a try, problems, plans, whatever?
--- Vegard Høgli GRUK Norway
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