Dear R-users,
I have encountered the following problem every now and then. But I was
dealing with a very small dataset before, so it wasn't a problem (I
just edited the dataset in Openoffice speadsheet). This time I have to
deal with many large datasets containing commuting flow data. I
See ?count.fields to get a vector of how many fields are on each line.
Also fill = TRUE on read.table() can be used to fill out short lines if
that is appropriate.
On 9/6/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear R-users,
I have encountered the following problem every now and then.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear R-users,
I have encountered the following problem every now and then. But I was
dealing with a very small dataset before, so it wasn't a problem (I
just edited the dataset in Openoffice speadsheet). This time I have to
deal with many large datasets containing
Thank you very much for help. I am learning R every day
Taka
Quoting Peter Dalgaard [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear R-users,
I have encountered the following problem every now and then. But I
was dealing with a very small dataset before, so it wasn't a problem
(I just
This is a known bug (PR #3234), only affects Win98.
The problem is the degree sign (or any nonstandard ASCII)
in your first line (7SALNIG°)
Mostly you can actually read these things in OK, but R crashes
on printing. I get round it sometimes using something like
dedegree - function(x) gsub(°,
PROTECTED]
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To: Helmut Kudrnovsky [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [R] Problems with read.table()
This is a known bug (PR #3234), only affects Win98.
The problem is the degree sign (or any nonstandard ASCII)
in your
Please show us exactly what you did: or see the R Data Import/Export
manual.
On Sun, 30 Mar 2003, ndesta wrote:
I was wondering if anyone can help me with read.table. I have been trying to
use it to read a txt file that I put in my current working directory. It just
wont get it. I keep