[Rd] read.table() with quoted integers

Peter Meilstrup peter.meilstrup at gmail.com
Fri Oct 4 18:20:29 CEST 2013


I think this is not the right approach -- quoting is a transport-layer
feature of the CSV format, not part of the application layer. Quotes
should always be interpreted away from column data before any data is
handed to the application layer. (CSV does not _have_ any application
layer; type information is conspicuously absent.)

If quoting is incorrectly treated as a feature of the values rather
than the encoding of the values, there's just going to be the same
problem with datetime columns, and any other column types.

So I disagree -- parsing quotes is never the column data-converter's
job, it's read.table's job.

Please refer to this specification of CSV:
http://kanspra.org/memberdirectory.csv

particularly this part:
"Fields may always be delimited with double quotes. The delimiters
will always be discarded."

and the implementation note which follows. Other CSV specs, like RFC
4180, contain similar statements. I think the only way to comply with
"always" discarding delimiters is to do it in read.table.

Peter


On Fri, Oct 4, 2013 at 6:58 AM, Milan Bouchet-Valat <nalimilan at club.fr> wrote:
> Le vendredi 04 octobre 2013 à 07:34 -0500, Joshua Ulrich a écrit :
>> On Thu, Oct 3, 2013 at 9:44 AM, Jens Oehlschlägel
>> <Jens.Oehlschlaegel at truecluster.com> wrote:
>> > I agree that quoted integer columns are not the most efficient way of
>> > delivering csv-files. However, the sad reality is that one receives such
>> > formats and still needs to read the data. Therefore it is not helpful to
>> > state that one should 'consider "character" to be the correct colClass in
>> > case an integer is surrounded by quotes'.
>> >
>> > The philosophy of read.table.ffdf is delegating the actual csv-parsing to a
>> > parse engine 'similarly' parametrized like 'read.table'. It is not 'bad
>> > coding practice' - but a conscious design decision - to assume that the
>> > parse engine behaves consistently, which read.table does not yet: it
>> > automatically recognizes a quoted integer column as 'integer', but when
>> > asked to explicitly interpret the column as 'integer' it does refuse to do
>>
>> read.table() does not "automatically recognize a quoted integer column
>> as 'integer'".  If colClasses is not specified, it reads the entire
>> column into a 'character' vector and then calls type.convert() on it.
>> type.convert() does all the necessary work to determine what class the
>> 'character' vector should be converted to.  If colClasses is
>> specified, quotes are not interpreted in non-'character' columns.
> That's pretty much the definition of "automatic". The fact that this is
> realized by type.convert() is really an implementation detail. But
> there's little point in discussing the question of whether this is
> automatic enough. Better concentrate on the actual result.
>
>> You want scan() to allocate an 'integer' vector, and then ensure (on
>> each read from the column in the file) that the value read is a valid
>> 'integer' type, while interpreting quotes (which strtol does not do,
>> so someone would have to write and test this new functionality).
> Yes, I think that's where the change should go. From a first look at
> scan.c:extractItem(), it seems that adapting scan() to skip quotes in
> the string before calling Strtoi() would not be too invasive and would
> not create a significant overhead. No string copy would even be involved
> since the pointer to the beginning of the string would just have to be
> increased to skip the quote character, and the null character be added a
> little earlier in the string.
>
> So this line:
>             INTEGER(ans)[i] = Strtoi(buffer, 10);
>
> would just have to be changed to something like:
>             char *quote;
>
>             if(buffer[0] == '\"' && (quote = strchr(buffer += 1, '\"')) != NULL)
>                 *quote = '\0';
>
>             INTEGER(ans)[i] = Strtoi(buffer, 10);
>
>
> For cleaner operation, the hardcoded '\"' could be replaced with the
> contents of read.table()'s quote argument.
>
>
> What do R core developers think about this small modification?
>
>
>> So your complaint is more with scan() than read.table().  And more
>> with Strtoi() (and therefore strtol) than scan().
> The complaint is about the combination of read.table() and scan(). It
> has nothing to do with strtol(), which has no reason to accept quotes as
> it's not designed to read CSV files...
>
>
> Regards
>
>> > so. So there is nothing wrong with read.table.ffdf (but something can be
>> > improved about read.table). It is *not* the 'best solution [...] to rewrite
>> > read.table.ffdf()' given that it nicely imports such data, see 4+1 ways to
>> > do so below.
>> >
>> > Jens Oehlschlägel
>> >
>> >
>> > # --- first create a csv file for demonstration
>> > -------------------------------
>> > require(ff)
>> > file <- "test.csv"
>> > path <- "c:/tmp"
>> > n <- 1e2
>> > d <- data.frame(x=1:n, y=shQuote(1:n))
>> > write.csv(d, file=file.path(path,file), row.names=FALSE, quote=FALSE)
>> >
>> > # --- how to do it with read.table.ffdf
>> > ---------------------------------------
>> >
>> > # 1 let the parse engine ignore colClasses and hope for the best
>> > fixedengine <- function(file, ..., colClasses=NA){
>> >         read.csv(file, ...)
>> > }
>> > df <- read.table.ffdf(file=file.path(path,file), first.rows = 10,
>> > FUN="fixedengine")
>> > df
>> >
>> > # 2 Suspend colClasses(=NA) for the quoted integer column only
>> > df <- read.csv.ffdf(file=file.path(path,file), first.rows = 10,
>> > colClasses=c("integer", NA))
>> > df
>> >
>> > # 3 do your own type conversion using transFUN
>> > #  after reading the problematic column as character
>> > # Being able to inject regexps is quite powerful isn't it?
>> > # Or error handlinig in case of varying column format!
>> > custominterp <- function(d){
>> >         d[[2]] <- as.integer(gsub('"', '', d[[2]]))
>> >         d
>> > }
>> > df <- read.table.ffdf(file=file.path(path,file), first.rows = 10,
>> > colClasses=c("integer", "character"), FUN="read.csv", transFUN=custominterp)
>> > df
>> >
>> > # 4 do your own line parsing and type conversion
>> > # Here you can even handle non-standard formats
>> > #  such as varying number of columns
>> > customengine <- function(file, header=TRUE, col.names, colClasses=NA,
>> > nrows=0, skip=0, fileEncoding="", comment.char = ""){
>> >         l <- scan(file, what="character", nlines=nrows+header, skip=skip,
>> > fileEncoding=fileEncoding, comment.char = comment.char)
>> >         s <- do.call("rbind", strsplit(l, ","))
>> >         if (header){
>> >                 d <- data.frame(as.integer(s[-1,1]),
>> > as.integer(gsub('"','',s[-1,2])))
>> >                 names(d) <- s[1,]
>> >         }else{
>> >                 d <- data.frame(as.integer(s[,1]),
>> > as.integer(gsub('"','',s[,2])))
>> >         }
>> >         if (!missing(col.names))
>> >                 names(d) <- col.names
>> >         d
>> > }
>> > df <- read.table.ffdf(file=file.path(path,file), first.rows = 10,
>> > FUN="customengine")
>> > df
>> >
>> > # 5 use a parsing engine that can apply colClasses to quoted integers
>> > # Unfortunately Henry Bengtson's readDataFrame does not work as a
>> > #  parse engine for read.table.ffdf because read.table.ffdf expects
>> > #  the parse engine to read successive chunks from a file connection
>> > #  while readDataFrame only accepts a filename as input file spec.
>> > # Yes it has 'skip', but using that would reread the file from scratch
>> > #  for each chunk (O(N^2) costs)
>> >
>> > ______________________________________________
>> > R-devel at r-project.org mailing list
>> > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
>>
>> --
>> Joshua Ulrich  |  about.me/joshuaulrich
>> FOSS Trading  |  www.fosstrading.com
>>
>> ______________________________________________
>> R-devel at r-project.org mailing list
>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel
>
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