jag009 ★★★ NJ, 2021-09-15 20:34 (1184 d 10:48 ago) Posting: # 22572 Views: 3,102 |
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Hi, Has anyone used the nonparametric superposition feature of winnonlin (or any feature which lets you simulation a profile)? I tried running a multi-dose simulation from time 0 to 144 hrs (as an example), and set the # of points to 144 so that the output would give me simulated concentration data from 0 - 144 hr in hourly interval. For some reason the program would end up with time as 1.xxxx, 2.xxxx with decimals. This is stupid. Thx John |
Helmut ★★★ Vienna, Austria, 2021-09-15 20:41 (1184 d 10:41 ago) @ jag009 Posting: # 22573 Views: 2,471 |
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H John, ❝ Has anyone used the nonparametric superposition feature of winnonlin (or any feature which lets you simulation a profile)? Yessir! ❝ I tried running a multi-dose simulation from time 0 to 144 hrs (as an example), and set the # of points to 144 so that the output would give me simulated concentration data from 0 - 144 hr in hourly interval. For some reason the program would end up with time as 1.xxxx, 2.xxxx with decimals. This is stupid. RTFM. You need to request 145 points. Try it in a spreadsheet: In 0 , in =A1+1 , and so forth. In which row do you get 144?— Dif-tor heh smusma 🖖🏼 Довге життя Україна! Helmut Schütz The quality of responses received is directly proportional to the quality of the question asked. 🚮 Science Quotes |
jag009 ★★★ NJ, 2021-09-15 21:21 (1184 d 10:02 ago) @ Helmut Posting: # 22574 Views: 2,487 |
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Thanks Helmut, My bad. should've known this. The damn floating license periodical check (which freezes the program) has been driving me nutz. John |