As a follow up, I tried this
a[2]
[1] 1_MO2 soles Sète sda.Rda
b[2]
[1] 1_MO2 soles Sète sda.Rda
a[2] == b[2]
[1] FALSE
Denis
Le 2011-08-15 à 14:42, Denis Chabot a écrit :
Hi,
I usually do not give second thought to accented vowels and R handles
everything fine thanks to UTF8 being used
Le 2011-08-15 à 22:24, Duncan Murdoch a écrit :
On 11-08-15 7:48 PM, Denis Chabot wrote:
Le 2011-08-15 à 19:06, Duncan Murdoch a écrit :
On 11-08-15 2:42 PM, Denis Chabot wrote:
Hi,
I usually do not give second thought to accented vowels and R handles
everything fine thanks to UTF8
Duncan, I think I'll avoid the problem in another manner, leaving me free to
choose whatever file names I want or need.
The reason I used gsub on file names is that I want to collate a series of
data.frames using rbind (or rbind.fill). For this, I need to know the names of
the data.frames I
Hi,
I usually do not give second thought to accented vowels and R handles
everything fine thanks to UTF8 being used in my R scripts. But today I have a
problem. Accented vowels do not behave properly when they were imported into R
using list.files.
Maybe this is because OS X (I'm using
On 11-08-15 2:42 PM, Denis Chabot wrote:
Hi,
I usually do not give second thought to accented vowels and R handles
everything fine thanks to UTF8 being used in my R scripts. But today I have a
problem. Accented vowels do not behave properly when they were imported into R
using list.files.
Le 2011-08-15 à 19:06, Duncan Murdoch a écrit :
On 11-08-15 2:42 PM, Denis Chabot wrote:
Hi,
I usually do not give second thought to accented vowels and R handles
everything fine thanks to UTF8 being used in my R scripts. But today I have
a problem. Accented vowels do not behave