\name{din32645} \docType{data} \alias{din32645} \title{Calibration data from DIN 32645} \description{ Sample dataset to test the package. } \usage{data(din32645)} \format{ A dataframe containing 10 rows of x and y values. } \examples{ data(din32645) m <- lm(y ~ x, data=din32645) calplot(m) (prediction <- inverse.predict(m,3500,alpha=0.01)) # This should give 0.074 according to DIN (cited from the Dintest test data) round(prediction$Confidence,3) # According to Dintest, we should get 0.07, but we get 0.0759 lod(m, alpha = 0.01) # In German, there is the "Erfassungsgrenze", with k = 2, # and we should get 0.14 according to Dintest lod(m, k = 2, alpha = 0.01) # According to Dintest, we should get 0.21, we get 0.212 loq(m, alpha = 0.01) } \references{ DIN 32645 (equivalent to ISO 11843) Dintest. Plugin for MS Excel for evaluations of calibration data. Written by Georg Schmitt, University of Heidelberg. \url{http://www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de/~df6/download/dintest.htm} } \keyword{datasets}