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I noticed I encounter this task quite often when programming in R, yet I don't think I implement it "pretty".

I get a list of file names, each containing a table or a simple vector. I want to read all the files into some construct (list of tables?) so I can later manipulate them in simple loops.

I know how to read each file into a table/vector, but I do not know how to put all these objects together in one structure (list?).

Anyway, I guess this is VERY routine so I'll be happy to hear about your tricks.

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3 Answers 3

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Do all the files have the same # of columns? If so, I think this should work to put them all into one dataframe.

library(plyr)
x <- c(FILENAMES)
df <- ldply(x, read.table, sep = "\t", header = T)

If they don't have all the same columns, then use llply() instead

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  • That will work even if the files don't have the same number of columns.
    – hadley
    Aug 6, 2010 at 23:51
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Or, without plyr:

filenames <- c("file1.txt", "file2.txt", "file3.txt")
mydata <- array(list(NULL))

for (i in 1:length(filenames))
    {
    mydata[[i]] <- read.table(filenames[i])
    }
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  • 1
    but better to pre-allocate the list, and might as well use the filenames: mydata <- vector("list", length(filenames)); names(mydata) <- filenames; ... mydata[[filenames[i]]] <- read.table(filenames[i])
    – mdsumner
    Aug 8, 2010 at 22:23
  • @mdsumner: What's the advantage of preallocating? Also, in this way you can put the read.table statement in a tryCatch instruction, so if file does not exist/is corrupted etc, you end up with a NULL in mydata which can then be checked against later in the script
    – nico
    Aug 9, 2010 at 6:55
  • it saves memory usage - otherwise the entire mydata list is recreated each time it is visited by an incremented [[i]]
    – mdsumner
    Aug 9, 2010 at 7:51
2

You can have a look at my answer here: Merge several data.frames into one data.frame with a loop.

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