Yes, it makes sense now; lesson learned. Thank you both! Sometimes it seems that no matter how good the documentation, some useR will inevitably (ab)use the code in ways that were never intended by the authors. Then when the code and/or documentation changes, it is not always obvious to the useR whether the intent of the authors has changed, or whether the useR had just been "getting the right answer for the wrong reason" all along. In this particular case, the change was documented as stemming from a "new feature" (as opposed to a bugfix or more stringent argument checking) that might appear to be a non fully backwards compatible change. For example one might have the (apparently) bad habit of using col.names as a shortcut to rename headers on-the-fly ...

   > getRversion()
   [1] ‘3.2.2’

   > read.table(textConnection("x y\na 3.14"), header = TRUE, colClasses = c(x = "character", y = "numeric"), col.names = c("foo", "bar"))
     foo  bar
   1   a 3.14

but indeed, the names attribute has zero effect on the result:

   > read.table(textConnection("x y\na 3.14"), header = TRUE, colClasses = c(y = "character", x = "numeric"), col.names = c("foo", "bar"))
     foo  bar
   1   a 3.14

so I agree it is good that we are checking for that now.

Regards
Ben

On 10/24/2017 08:55 AM, Martin Maechler wrote:
Benjamin Tyner <bty...@gmail.com>
     on Tue, 24 Oct 2017 07:21:33 -0400 writes:
     > Jeff,
     > Thank you for your reply. The intent was to construct a minimum
     > reproducible example. The same warning occurs when the 'file' argument
     > points to a file on disk with a million lines. But you are correct, my
     > example was slightly malformed and in fact gives an error under R
     > version 3.2.2. Please allow me to try again; in older versions of R,

     >    > read.table(file = textConnection("a\t3.14"), header = FALSE,
     > colClasses = c(x = "character", y = "numeric"), sep="\t")
     >      V1   V2
     >    1  a 3.14

     > (with no warning). As of version 3.3.0,

     >    > read.table(file = textConnection("a\t3.14"), header = FALSE,
     > colClasses = c(x = "character", y = "numeric"), sep="\t")
     >      V1   V2
     >    1  a 3.14
     >    Warning message:
     >    In read.table(file = textConnection("a\t3.14"), header = FALSE,  :
     >      not all columns named in 'colClasses' exist

     > My intent was not to complain but rather to learn more about best
     > practices regarding the names attribute.

which is a nice attitude, thank you.

An even shorter MRE (as header=FALSE is default, and the default
sep="" works, too):

tt <- read.table(textConnection("a 3.14"), colClasses = c(x="character", 
y="numeric"))
Warning message:
In read.table(file = textConnection("a 3.14"), colClasses = c(x = "character",  
:
   not all columns named in 'colClasses' exist
If you read in the help page -- you did read that before posting, did you?---
how 'colClasses' should be specified ,

     colClasses: character.  A vector of classes to be assumed for the
              columns.  If unnamed, recycled as necessary.  If named, names
              are matched with unspecified values being taken to be ‘NA’.

              Possible values are ..................
              .........

and the 'x' and 'y' names you used, are matched with the
colnames ... which on the other hand are "V1" and "V2"  for
you, and so you provoke a warning.

Once you have read (and understood) the above part of the help
page, it becomes, easy, no?

tt <- read.table(textConnection("a 3.14"), colClasses = 
c("character","numeric"))
t2 <- read.table(textConnection("a 3.14"), colClasses=c(x="character",y="numeric"), 
col.names=c("x","y"))
t2
   x    y
1 a 3.14
i.e., no warning in both of these two cases.

So please, please, PLEASE: at least non-beginners like you *should*
take the effort to read the help page (and report if these seem
incomplete or otherwise improvable)...

Best,
Martin Maechler
ETH Zurich

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