It seems that this addition works, but has created just one object
called 'peak' with all the data from those 100 files. I'd like each
file to have a corresponding object containing the data.
Thanks for your help!
On Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 19:43, Zeljko Vrba zv...@ifi.uio.no wrote:
On Tue, Apr
By doing peak - list() you initialize a list and then you are adding the
data objects to the list in the for loop.To access each data object just go:
peaks[[i]]
Where i is in [1,100]. This will return the data object you want.
Adrian
On Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 11:23 PM, Taylor Hermes
I'm trying to import data from 100 text files and create data frames
that reflect their numbering.
The slow way would be to do the following:
peak1 - read.table(1--peak--hist.txt, sep=,, header=TRUE)
peak2 - read.table(2--peak--hist.txt, sep=,, header=TRUE)
peak3 - read.table(3--peak--hist.txt,
On Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 07:09:04PM -1000, Taylor Hermes wrote:
I tried the following:
Add this before for():
peak - list()
for (i in 1:100) {
peak[[i]] - read.table(paste(i,--one--hist.txt, sep=), sep=,,
header=TRUE)
}
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