type_convert | R Documentation |
This is useful if you need to do some manual munging - you can read the
columns in as character, clean it up with (e.g.) regular expressions and
then let readr take another stab at parsing it. The name is a homage to
the base utils::type.convert()
.
type_convert(
df,
col_types = NULL,
na = c("", "NA"),
trim_ws = TRUE,
locale = default_locale(),
guess_integer = FALSE
)
df |
A data frame. |
col_types |
One of If |
na |
Character vector of strings to interpret as missing values. Set this
option to |
trim_ws |
Should leading and trailing whitespace (ASCII spaces and tabs) be trimmed from each field before parsing it? |
locale |
The locale controls defaults that vary from place to place.
The default locale is US-centric (like R), but you can use
|
guess_integer |
If |
type_convert()
removes a 'spec' attribute,
because it likely modifies the column data types.
(see spec()
for more information about column specifications).
df <- data.frame(
x = as.character(runif(10)),
y = as.character(sample(10)),
stringsAsFactors = FALSE
)
str(df)
str(type_convert(df))
df <- data.frame(x = c("NA", "10"), stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
str(type_convert(df))
# Type convert can be used to infer types from an entire dataset
# first read the data as character
data <- read_csv(readr_example("mtcars.csv"),
col_types = list(.default = col_character())
)
str(data)
# Then convert it with type_convert
type_convert(data)
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.