[R] read.table: check.names arg - feature request
Vadim Ogranovich
vograno at evafunds.com
Thu Sep 4 19:00:40 CEST 2003
I admit I should have been more clear in my original posting. Let me try again (and I do know that by deafulat read.table discards everything after '#' which is why I use comment.char="", my bad not to mention this).
Here is a typical example of my data file:
#key value
foo 1.2
boo 1.3
As you see the header line begins with '#' and then lists the column names, however make.names will convert the raw names c("#key", "value") to c(".key", "value") while I need c("key", "value"), i.e. no dot before key. So I am asking to give us a hook to specify the function that will handle this situation.
I am not sure I understand how having this hook can result in an invalid data frame? It can return invalid names, but check.names=FALSE can too.
Thanks,
Vadim
-----Original Message-----
From: Martin Maechler [mailto:maechler at stat.math.ethz.ch]
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2003 1:28 AM
To: Vadim Ogranovich
Cc: R-Help (E-mail)
Subject: Re: [R] read.table: check.names arg - feature request
>>>>> "Vadim" == Vadim Ogranovich <vograno at evafunds.com>
>>>>> on Wed, 3 Sep 2003 14:29:25 -0700 writes:
Vadim> Hi, I thought it would be convenient if the
Vadim> check.names argument to read.table, which currently
Vadim> can only be TRUE/FALSE, could take a function value
Vadim> as well. If the function is supplied it should be
Vadim> used instead of the default make.names.
One could, but it's not necessary in your case (see below), and
it's a potential pit to fall in.. We want read.table() to
return valid data frames.
Vadim> Here is an example where it can come in handy. I tend
Vadim> to keep my data in coma-separated files with a header
Vadim> line. The header line is prefixed with a comment sign
Vadim> '#' to simplify identification of these lines. Now
Vadim> when I read.table the files the '#' is converted to
Vadim> '.' while I want it to be discarded.
Hmm, are you using a very old version of R,
or haven't you seen the `comment.char = "#"' argument of
read.table()?
Reading "?read.table", also note the note about
`blank.lines.skip' , and then realize that the default for
blank.lines.skip is ` !fill ' and that `fill = TRUE' for all
the read.csv* and read.delim* incantation of read.table().
In sum, it's very easy to use current read.table() for your
situation!
Vadim> P.S. I don't know if r-help is the right place for
Vadim> feature requests. If it's not please let me know
Vadim> where the right one is.
Since your proposal can be interpreted as "How do I use
read.table() when my file has comment lines?",
r-help has been very appropriate.
Otherwise, and particularly if the proposal is more technical,
R-devel would be better suited.
Regards,
Martin Maechler <maechler at stat.math.ethz.ch> http://stat.ethz.ch/~maechler/
Seminar fuer Statistik, ETH-Zentrum LEO C16 Leonhardstr. 27
ETH (Federal Inst. Technology) 8092 Zurich SWITZERLAND
phone: x-41-1-632-3408 fax: ...-1228 <><
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