问题
What is the best way to read a file into R when the header has two necessary lines for the header?
This happens to me all the time, as people often use one line for the column name and then include another line underneath it for the unit of measurement. I don't want to skip anything. I want the names and the units to carry through.
Here is what a typical file with two headers might look like:
trt biomass yield
crop Mg/ha bu/ac
C2 17.76 205.92
C2 17.96 207.86
CC 17.72 197.22
CC 18.42 205.20
CCW 18.15 200.51
CCW 17.45 190.59
P 3.09 0.00
P 3.34 0.00
S2 5.13 49.68
S2 5.36 49.72
回答1:
I would do two steps, assuming we know that the first row contains the labels, and there are always two headers.
header <- scan("file.txt", nlines = 1, what = character())
data <- read.table("file.txt", skip = 2, header = FALSE)
Then add the character vector header on as the names component:
names(data) <- header
For your data this would be
header <- scan("data.txt", nlines = 1, what = character())
data <- read.table("data.txt", skip = 2, header = FALSE)
names(data) <- header
head(data)
> head(data)
trt biomass yield
1 C2 17.76 205.92
2 C2 17.96 207.86
3 CC 17.72 197.22
4 CC 18.42 205.20
5 CCW 18.15 200.51
6 CCW 17.45 190.59
If you want the units, as per @DWin's answer, then do a second scan() on line 2
header2 <- scan("data.txt", skip = 1, nlines = 1, what = character())
names(data) <- paste0(header, header2)
> head(data)
trtcrop biomassMg/ha yieldbu/ac
1 C2 17.76 205.92
2 C2 17.96 207.86
3 CC 17.72 197.22
4 CC 18.42 205.20
5 CCW 18.15 200.51
6 CCW 17.45 190.59
回答2:
Use readLines with 2 for the limit, parse it, paste0 them together, then read in with read.table with skip =2 and header=FALSE (the default). Finish the process off with assignment of the column names:
dat <- "trt biomass yield
crop Mg/ha bu/ac
C2 17.76 205.92
C2 17.96 207.86
CC 17.72 197.22
CC 18.42 205.20
CCW 18.15 200.51
CCW 17.45 190.59
P 3.09 0.00
P 3.34 0.00
S2 5.13 49.68
S2 5.36 49.72
"
You would probably use a file argument but using the text argument to the read-functions makes this more self-contained:
readLines(textConnection(dat),n=2)
#[1] "trt\tbiomass\tyield" "crop\tMg/ha\tbu/ac"
head2 <- read.table(text=readLines(textConnection(dat),n=2), sep="\t", stringsAsFactors=FALSE)
with(head2, paste0(head2[1,],head2[2,]) )
# [1] "trtcrop" "biomassMg/ha" "yieldbu/ac"
joinheadrs <- with(head2, paste0(head2[1,],head2[2,]) )
newdat <- read.table(text=dat, sep="\t",skip=2)
colnames(newdat)<- joinheadrs
#-------------------
> newdat
trtcrop biomassMg/ha yieldbu/ac
1 C2 17.76 205.92
2 C2 17.96 207.86
3 CC 17.72 197.22
4 CC 18.42 205.20
5 CCW 18.15 200.51
6 CCW 17.45 190.59
7 P 3.09 0.00
8 P 3.34 0.00
9 S2 5.13 49.68
10 S2 5.36 49.72
Might be better to use paste with an underscore-sep:
joinheadrs <- with(head2, paste(head2[1,],head2[2,] ,sep="_") )
joinheadrs
#[1] "trt_crop" "biomass_Mg/ha" "yield_bu/ac"
回答3:
Almost the same method to the other answers, just shortening to 2 statements:
dat <- "trt biomass yield
crop Mg/ha bu/ac
C2 17.76 205.92
C2 17.96 207.86
CC 17.72 197.22
CC 18.42 205.20
CCW 18.15 200.51
CCW 17.45 190.59
P 3.09 0.00
P 3.34 0.00
S2 5.13 49.68
S2 5.36 49.72"
header <- sapply(read.table(text=dat, nrow=2), paste, collapse="_")
result <- read.table(text=dat, skip=2, col.names=header)
Result:
> head(result,2)
trt_crop biomass_Mg/ha yield_bu/ac
1 C2 17.76 205.92
2 C2 17.96 207.86
...
回答4:
A slightly different explained step by step approach:
Read only the first two lines of the files as data (without headers):
headers <- read.table("data.txt", nrows=2, header=FALSE)Create the headers names with the two (or more) first rows,
sappyallows to make operations over the columns (in this case paste) - read more about sapply here :headers_names <- sapply(headers,paste,collapse="_")Read the data of the files (skipping the first 2 rows):
data <- read.csv(file="data.txt", skip = 2, header=FALSE)And assign the headers of step two to the data:
names(data) <- headers_names
The advantage is that you would have clear control of the the parameters of read.table (such as sep for commas, and stringAsFactors - for both the headers and the data)
回答5:
Here is a function to read in headers over multiple lines, largely based on Gavin Simpson's excellent answer.
The function defaults to comma separated values and two lines of header, and returns a data.frame with the first line in the file as header.
The function:
read.multi.line.header <- function(path, header.lines = 2, sep = ","){
header <- scan(path, nlines = 1, what = character(), sep = sep)
data <- read.table(path, skip = header.lines, header = FALSE, sep = sep)
base::names(data) <- header
return(data)
}
Produces:
mydata <- read.multi.line.header(path = "data.txt")
> head(mydata)
trt biomass yield
1 C2 17.76 205.92
2 C2 17.96 207.86
3 CC 17.72 197.22
4 CC 18.42 205.20
5 CCW 18.15 200.51
6 CCW 17.45 190.59
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17797840/reading-two-line-headers-in-r