Yes, both in classical and in Bayesian form. The work is done (!), but I am not sure whether it will be in the upcoming release (which we are going to test now) or the one after that. In the mean time, if you want to run the frequentist test (which I strongly dislike, but OK), you can simply look at the 90% confidence interval and see whether it falls inside the area of equivalence.
Comments
Yes, both in classical and in Bayesian form. The work is done (!), but I am not sure whether it will be in the upcoming release (which we are going to test now) or the one after that. In the mean time, if you want to run the frequentist test (which I strongly dislike, but OK), you can simply look at the 90% confidence interval and see whether it falls inside the area of equivalence.
Cheers,
E.J.
Update: it will be in the next release :-)
E.J.