[R] Newbie problem with read.table
Jan Conrad
Jan.Conrad at cern.ch
Wed Oct 12 15:16:06 CEST 2005
Thank you all for your answers. Yes, indeed it was only a printing
problem (in fact I had tried
the \t option before without sucess).
My first interaction with R (and the R help), I must say I am impressed.
Best,
Jan
-----Original Message-----
From: Marc Schwartz [mailto:MSchwartz at mn.rr.com]
Sent: Wednesday, October 12, 2005 3:14 PM
To: Roger.Bivand at nhh.no
Cc: Jan Conrad; r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch
Subject: Re: [R] Newbie problem with read.table
On Wed, 2005-10-12 at 14:56 +0200, Roger Bivand wrote:
> On Wed, 12 Oct 2005, Jan Conrad wrote:
>
> > Hi R,
> > I have a seemingly simple problem. I have a table in following
> > format (tab seperated)
> >
> > Njets NBjets NElec NMuon Meff HT HT3j HE
Aplan
> > Plan
> > 1 4 3 2 0 366.278 253.642 87.7473 1385
> > 0.0124566 0.376712
> > 2 3 1 1 0 235.19 157.688 18.2852
> > 574.253 0.00064187 0.00528814
> >
> > I read in with:
> >
> > > ttbar<-read.table("test2.dat",header=TRUE)
> >
> >
> > > ttbar
> > Njets NBjets NElec NMuon Meff HT HT3j HE
Aplan
> > 1 4 3 2 0 366.278 253.642 87.7473 1385.000
0.01245660
> > 2 3 1 1 0 235.190 157.688 18.2852 574.253
0.00064187
> > Plan
> > 1 0.37671200
> > 2 0.00528814,
> >
> > i.e.. the table is split after 9 variables. How come ?
>
> > options("width")
> $width
> [1] 80
>
> says what the width of your console is. Columns beyond this get
> wrapped
> gently (not each row by itself) - it can be set different values if
you
> choose - try:
>
> ow <- options("width")
> options(width=40)
> options("width")
> ttbar
> options(ow)
> options("width")
>
> So this is just the print function for data.frame objects doing its
> unsung job. A very useful function for looking at things when they
> don't seem to be what you think is str(), which concisely says what
> the structure of an object is, so str(ttbar) should tell you that it
> is a data frame of 10 variables and 2 observations.
Thanks to Roger for this clarification. I took the splitting of the
variables to be a consequence of the delimiter and not just a benign
consequence of the printed output (at least I presume this is the proper
interpretation of Jan's problem.)
The tab character is of course included in "whitespace"....using "\t"
explicitly would be helpful if there is embedded whitespace (other than
a tab) within a field.
Marc
<Off to get another cup of coffee....>
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