Specifying column names in a data.frame changes spaces to “.”

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耶瑟儿~
耶瑟儿~ 2020-11-28 14:25

Let\'s say I have a data.frame, like so:

x <- c(1:10,1:10,1:10,1:10,1:10,1:10,1:10,1:10,1:10,1:10)
df <- data.frame(\"Label 1\"=x,\"Label 2\"=rnorm(10         


        
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  •  孤独总比滥情好
    2020-11-28 14:55

    You may set check.names = FALSE in data.frame (as well as in read.table):

    df <- data.frame("Label 1" = 1:3, "Label 2" = rnorm(3), check.names = FALSE)
    

    returns:

      Label 1    Label 2
    1       1  0.2013347
    2       2  1.8823111
    3       3 -0.5233811
    

    From ?data.frame:

    check.names
    logical. If TRUE then the names of the variables in the data frame are checked to ensure that they are syntactically valid variable names and are not duplicated. If necessary they are adjusted (by make.names) so that they are.


    From ?make.names:

    A syntactically valid name consists of letters, numbers and the dot or underline characters and starts with a letter or the dot not followed by a number. Names such as ".2way" are not valid, and neither are the reserved words.

    All invalid characters are translated to "."


    Also, if you need to subset a variable with an 'invalid' name using $, you can use backticks `. For example:

    df$`Label 1`
    

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