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readr's Introduction

readr

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The goal of readr is to provide a fast and friendly way to read tabular data into R. The most important functions are:

  • Read delimited files: read_delim(), read_csv(), read_tsv(), read_csv2().
  • Read fixed width files: read_fwf(), read_table().
  • Read lines: read_lines().
  • Read whole file: read_file().
  • Re-parse existing data frame: type_convert().

Installation

readr is now available from CRAN.

install.packages("readr")

You can try out the dev version with:

# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("hadley/readr")

Usage

library(readr)
library(dplyr)

mtcars_path <- tempfile(fileext = ".csv")
write_csv(mtcars, mtcars_path)

# Read a csv file into a data frame
read_csv(mtcars_path)
# Read lines into a vector
read_lines(mtcars_path)
# Read whole file into a single string
read_file(mtcars_path)

Column types

Currently, readr automatically recognises the following types of columns:

  • col_logical() [l], containing only T, F, TRUE or FALSE.
  • col_integer() [i], integers.
  • col_double() [d], doubles.
  • col_euro_double() [e], "Euro" doubles that use , as decimal separator.
  • col_character() [c], everything else.
  • col_date(format = "") [D]: Y-m-d dates.
  • col_datetime(format = "", tz = "UTC") [T]: ISO8601 date times

To recognise these columns, it reads the first 100 rows of your dataset. This is not guaranteed to be perfect, but it's fast and a reasonable heuristic. If you get a lot of parsing failures, you'll need to re-read the file, overriding the default choices as described below.

You can also manually specify other column types:

  • col_skip() [_], don't import this column.
  • col_datetime(date), dates with given format.
  • col_datetime(format, tz), date times with given format. If the timezone is UTC, this is >20x faster than loading then parsing with strptime().
  • col_numeric() [n], a sloppy numeric parser that ignores everything apart from 0-9, - and . (this is useful for parsing data formatted as currencies).
  • col_factor(levels, ordered), parse a fixed set of known values into a factor

Use the col_types argument to override the default choices. There are two ways to use it:

  • With a string: "dc__d": read first column as double, second as character, skip the next two and read the last column as a double. (There's no way to use this form with types that need parameters like date time and factor.)

  • With a (named) list of col objects:

    read_csv("iris.csv", col_types = list(
      Sepal.Length = col_double(),
      Sepal.Width = col_double(),
      Petal.Length = col_double(),
      Petal.Width = col_double(),
      Species = col_factor(c("setosa", "versicolor", "virginica"))
    ))

    Any omitted columns will be parsed automatically, so the previous call is equivalent to:

    read_csv("iris.csv", col_types = list(
      Species = col_factor(c("setosa", "versicolor", "virginica"))
    )

Output

read_csv() produces a data frame with the following properties:

  • Characters are never automatically converted to factors (i.e. no more stringsAsFactors = FALSE).

  • Column names are left as is, not munged into valid R identifiers (i.e. there is no check.names = TRUE).

  • The data frame is given class c("tbl_df", "tbl", "data.frame") so if you also use dplyr you'll get an enhanced display.

  • Row names are never set.

Problems

If there are any problems parsing the file, the read_ function will throw a warning telling you how many problems there are. You can then use the problems() function to access a data frame that gives information about each problem:

df <- read_csv(col_types = "dd", col_names = c("x", "y"), skip = 1, "
1,2
a,b
")
#> Warning message: There were 2 problems. See problems(x) for more details
problems(df)
#>   row col expected actual
#> 1   2   1 a double      a
#> 2   2   2 a double      b

It's likely that there will be cases that you can never load without some manual regexp-based munging in R. Load those columns with col_character(), fix them up as needed, then use convert_types() to re-run the automated conversion on every character column in the data frame. Alternatively, you can use parse_integer(), parse_numeric(), parse_date() etc to parse a single character vector at a time.

Compared to base functions

Compared to the corresponding base functions, readr functions:

  • Use a consistent naming scheme for the parameters (e.g. col_names and col_types not header and colClasses).

  • Are much faster (up to 10x faster).

  • Have a helpful progress bar if loading is going to take a while.

Compared to fread()

data.table has a function similar to read_csv() called fread. Compared to fread, readr:

  • Is slower (currently ~1.2-2x slower. If you want absolutely the best performance, use data.table::fread().

  • Readr has a slightly more sophisticated parser, recognising both doubled ("""") and backslash escapes ("""). Readr allows you to read factors and date times directly from disk.

  • fread() saves you work by automatically guessing the delimiter, whether or not the file has a header, how many lines to skip by default and more. Readr forces you to supply these parameters.

  • The underlying designs are quite different. Readr is designed to be general, and dealing with new types of rectangular data just requires implementing a new tokenizer. fread() is designed to be as fast as possible. fread() is pure C, readr is C++ (and Rcpp).

Acknowledgements

Thanks to:

  • Joe Cheng for showing me the beauty of deterministic finite automata for parsing, and for teaching me why I should write a tokenizer.

  • JJ Allaire for helping me come up with a design that makes very few copies, and is easy to extend.

  • Dirk Eddelbuettel for coming up with the name!

readr's People

Contributors

christophergandrud avatar dgromer avatar dickoa avatar edwindj avatar hadley avatar ironholds avatar johnmcdonnell avatar kbenoit avatar romainfrancois avatar tonyladson avatar

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