read_table | R Documentation |
read_table()
is designed to read the type of textual
data where each column is separated by one (or more) columns of space.
read_table()
is like read.table()
, it allows any number of whitespace
characters between columns, and the lines can be of different lengths.
spec_table()
returns the column specifications rather than a data frame.
read_table(
file,
col_names = TRUE,
col_types = NULL,
locale = default_locale(),
na = "NA",
skip = 0,
n_max = Inf,
guess_max = min(n_max, 1000),
progress = show_progress(),
comment = "",
show_col_types = should_show_types(),
skip_empty_rows = TRUE
)
file |
Either a path to a file, a connection, or literal data (either a single string or a raw vector). Files ending in Literal data is most useful for examples and tests. To be recognised as
literal data, the input must be either wrapped with Using a value of |
col_names |
Either If If Missing ( |
col_types |
One of If Column specifications created by Alternatively, you can use a compact string representation where each character represents one column:
By default, reading a file without a column specification will print a
message showing what |
locale |
The locale controls defaults that vary from place to place.
The default locale is US-centric (like R), but you can use
|
na |
Character vector of strings to interpret as missing values. Set this
option to |
skip |
Number of lines to skip before reading data. |
n_max |
Maximum number of lines to read. |
guess_max |
Maximum number of lines to use for guessing column types.
Will never use more than the number of lines read.
See |
progress |
Display a progress bar? By default it will only display
in an interactive session and not while knitting a document. The automatic
progress bar can be disabled by setting option |
comment |
A string used to identify comments. Any text after the comment characters will be silently ignored. |
show_col_types |
If |
skip_empty_rows |
Should blank rows be ignored altogether? i.e. If this
option is |
read_fwf()
to read fixed width files where each column
is not separated by whitespace. read_fwf()
is also useful for reading
tabular data with non-standard formatting.
ws <- readr_example("whitespace-sample.txt")
writeLines(read_lines(ws))
read_table(ws)
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