9

This question is stemming from the following data.table bug report - #4978, but I'm going to use a data.frame example to illustrate that this is not a data.table specific issue:

Consider the following:

df = data.frame(a = 1, hø = 1)

identical(names(df), c("a", "hø"))
#[1] TRUE

.Internal(inspect(names(df)))
#@0x0000000007b27458 16 STRSXP g0c2 [NAM(2)] (len=2, tl=0)
#  @0x000000000ee604c0 09 CHARSXP g1c1 [MARK,gp=0x61] [ASCII] [cached] "a"
#  @0x0000000007cfa910 09 CHARSXP g0c1 [gp=0x21] [cached] "hø"

.Internal(inspect(c("a", "hø")))
#@0x0000000007b274c8 16 STRSXP g0c2 [] (len=2, tl=0)
#  @0x000000000ee604c0 09 CHARSXP g1c1 [MARK,gp=0x61] [ASCII] [cached] "a"
#  @0x0000000007cfa970 09 CHARSXP g0c1 [gp=0x24,ATT] [latin1] [cached] "hø"

Notice, that even though identical thinks the two are identical, the underlying string cache stores the "hø" in two different places, while storing the "a" in one. What is happening? Is this an R string-caching bug?

And the reason this matters is that %chin% fails here (because of the above discrepancy):

library(data.table)
"a" %chin% names(df)
#[1] TRUE
"hø" %chin% names(df)
#[1] FALSE
4
  • this feels like a problem for the data.table package maintainer. While I am curious to know the answer too, I doubt that this counts as an R bug because R (presumably) doesn't make any guarantees to the user about how/where it stores strings ... presumably it's not an accident that you used "hø" as your example -- does this happen repeatably if and only if you consider non-ASCII characters?
    – Ben Bolker
    Oct 8, 2013 at 20:47
  • +1. I get the expected answer after names(df)[2] <- "hø"; "hø" %chin% names(df). Maybe it's got something to do with how data.frame treats names...
    – Frank
    Oct 8, 2013 at 21:02
  • @BenBolker yep, only for those
    – eddi
    Oct 8, 2013 at 21:52
  • 1
    @eddi, this (%chin% and chmatch behaviour) has been fixed in 1.8.11 (commit 976).
    – Arun
    Oct 9, 2013 at 20:59

1 Answer 1

8

"hø" is being marked as being in UTF-8 encoding when printed direct to the console. You can force it to be native using enc2native and this problem disappears, however I am still working out why this is...

Encoding("hø")
# [1] "UTF-8"

.Internal( inspect( c( "a" , enc2native("hø") ) ) )
#@1081d60a0 16 STRSXP g0c2 [] (len=2, tl=0)
#  @100af87d8 09 CHARSXP g1c1 [MARK,gp=0x61] [ASCII] [cached] "a"
#  @1081e3a08 09 CHARSXP g1c1 [MARK,gp=0x21] [cached] "hø"

enc2native("hø") %chin% names(df)
#[1] TRUE

On the Encoding help page there is a lot of relevant info, I this would be relevant:

There are other ways for character strings to acquire a declared encoding apart from explicitly setting it (and these have changed as R has evolved). Functions scan, read.table, readLines, and parse have an encoding argument that is used to declare encodings, iconv declares encodings from its from argument, and console input in suitable locales is also declared. intToUtf8 declares its output as "UTF-8", and output text connections (see textConnection) are marked if running in a suitable locale. Under some circumstances (see its help page) source(encoding=) will mark encodings of character strings it outputs.

Update

Seems to me that anything in the basic ASCII character (character codes 0-127) set gets an "unknown" encoding, and any characters outside of this get set to "UTF-8" by default, including from the extended ASCII codes (character codes 128-255).

2
  • thanks! this definitely solves the problem as far as the bug report goes, but I still don't understand what's happening :)
    – eddi
    Oct 8, 2013 at 21:11
  • @eddi me neither. I'm not sure why it should encode ASCII characters as UTF-8, but then I don't know enough about encodings - they really confuse me! Oct 8, 2013 at 21:16

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