12

I've had a look for answers, but have only found things referring to C or C#. I realise that much of R is written in C but my knowledge of it is non-existent. I am also relatively new to R. I am using the current Rstudio.

This is similar to what I want, I think. Read the data efficiently with multiple separating lines in R

I have a csv file but one variable is a string with values separated by _ and - And I would like to know if there is a package or extra code which does the following on the read. command.

"1","Client1","Name2","*Name3_Name1_KB_MobApp_M-13-44_AU_PI Likes by KB_ANDROID","2013-08-31 13:39:55.0","2013-10-16 13:58:00.0",0,218,4,93,1377907200000
"2","Client1","Name2","*Name3_Name1_KB_MobApp_M-13-44_AU_PI Likes by KB_ANDROID","2013-08-31 13:39:55.0","2013-10-16 13:58:00.0",0,390,5,157,1377993600000
"3","Client1","Name2","*Name3_Name1_KB_MobApp_M-13-44_AU_PI Likes by KB_ANDROID","2013-08-31 13:39:55.0","2013-10-16 13:58:00.0",0,376,5,193,1.37808e+12
"4","Client1","Name2","*Name3_Name1_KB_MobApp_M-13-44_AU_PI Likes by KB_ANDROID","2013-08-31 13:39:55.0","2013-10-16 13:58:00.0",1,35,1,15,1377907200000
"5","Client1","Name2","*Name3_Name1_KB_MobApp_M-13-44_AU_PI Likes by KB_ANDROID","2013-08-31 13:39:55.0","2013-10-16 13:58:00.0",12,11258,117,2843,1377993600000
"6","Client1","Name2","*Name3_Name1_KB_MobApp_M-13-44_AU_PI Likes by KB_ANDROID","2013-08-31 13:39:55.0","2013-10-16 13:58:00.0",5,4659,56,1826,1.37808e+12
"7","Client1","Name2","*Name3_Name1_KB_MobApp_M-13-44_AU_PI Likes by KB_ANDROID","2013-08-31 13:39:55.0","2013-10-16 13:58:00.0",7,7296,136,2684,1377907200000
"8","Client1","Name2","*Name3_Name1_KB_MobApp_M-13-44_AU_PI Likes by KB_IOS_IPAD","2013-08-31 13:18:21.0","2013-10-16 13:58:00.0",0,4533,35,1632,1377907200000
"9","Client1","Name2","*Name3_Name1_KB_MobApp_M-13-44_AU_PI Likes by KB_IOS_IPAD","2013-08-31 13:18:21.0","2013-10-16 13:58:00.0",0,421,6,161,1377993600000
"10","Client1","Name2","*Name3_Name1_KB_MobApp_M-13-44_AU_PI Likes by KB_IOS_IPAD","2013-08-31 13:18:21.0","2013-10-16 13:58:00.0",0,57,2,23,1.37808e+12

Example row:

Name    Name1   *XYZ_Name3_KB_MobApp_M-18-25_AU_PI ANDROID  2013-09-32 14:39:55.0   2013-10-16 13:58:00.0   0   218 4   93  1377907200000

So it's easy enough to read in

results <- read.delim("~/results", header=F)

but then I still have the string *XYZ_Name3_KB_MobApp_M-18-25_AU_PI

Desired output(separate by _ and by -):

Name    Name1   *XYZ   Name3  KB   MobApp   M 18 25  AU  PI ANDROID 2013-09-32 14:39:55.0   2013-10-16 13:58:00.0   0   218 4   93  1377907200000

but not split up the time string.

---- Thanks @Henrik and @AnandaMahto for the code and package. ----

library(splitstackshape)

# split concatenated column by `_`
df4 <- concat.split(data = df3, split.col = "V3", sep = "_", drop = TRUE)

# split the remaining concatenated part by `-`
df5 <- concat.split(data = df4, split.col = "V3_5", sep = "-", drop = TRUE)
5
  • I have the option of exporting again to csv and then putting into excel and using text to columns twice. but as I'm on excel 2010 it's with a limited # of rows.
    – CArnold
    Nov 19, 2013 at 15:16
  • 1
    Have a look at str_split or stringr::str_split_fixed and see if that helps. Nov 19, 2013 at 15:20
  • Ah, so simple. Do you think I should do it it multiple steps then? Rather than on import.
    – CArnold
    Nov 19, 2013 at 15:38
  • I'd do it right after import. I'll post snippet below.
    – hrbrmstr
    Nov 19, 2013 at 15:48
  • you can specify more than one split character in strsplit using regex and | operator, e.g strsplit("*XYZ_Name3_KB_MobApp_M-18-25_AU_PI ANDROID",split="\_|\\-")
    – ndr
    Nov 19, 2013 at 15:57

3 Answers 3

5

I find the functions in package splitstackshape convenient in cases like this.

library(splitstackshape)

# split concatenated column by `_`
results2 <- concat.split(data = results, split.col = "V3", sep = "_", drop = TRUE)

# split the remaining concatenated part by `-`
results3 <- concat.split(data = results2, split.col = "V3_5", sep = "-", drop = TRUE)
results3
3
  • I'm getting an "Error in FUN(NA_integer_[[1L]], ...) : argument must be coercible to non-negative integer" but thanks for the package I'll have look into making it work.
    – CArnold
    Nov 19, 2013 at 15:56
  • OK. Possibly there are some characteristics of your original data which are not represented in the small sample in your question (which works fine, for me). Cheers.
    – Henrik
    Nov 19, 2013 at 16:01
  • 1
    @ChristianArnold, as the package's author, I'd be interested in seeing some actual data that creates this error and the steps to reproduce it. Feel free to do so by creating an issue at the package's Github issue tracker. Thanks! Nov 19, 2013 at 16:04
3
library(stringr)

results <- read.delim("~/results", header=F)
results <- cbind(results,str_split_fixed(results$V3, "[_-]", 9))

(this assumes you're OK with having the original column still in place)

2

Try this:

# dummy data
df <- read.table(text="
Name    Name1   *XYZ_Name3_KB_MobApp_M-18-25_AU_PI ANDROID  2013-09-32 14:39:55.0   2013-10-16 13:58:00.0   0   218 4   93  1377907200000
Name    Name2   *CCC_Name3_KB_MobApp_M-18-25_AU_PI ANDROID  2013-09-32 14:39:55.0   2013-10-16 13:58:00.0   0   218 4   93  1377907200000
", as.is = TRUE)

# replace "_" to "-"
df_V3 <- gsub(pattern="_", replacement="-", df$V3, fixed = TRUE)

# strsplit, make dataframe
df_V3 <- do.call(rbind.data.frame, strsplit(df_V3, split = "-"))

# output, merge columns
output <- cbind(df[, c(1:2)],
                df_V3,
                df[, c(4:ncol(df))])

Building on the comments below, here is another related option, but one which uses read.table instead of strsplit.

splitCol <- "V3"
temp <- read.table(text = gsub("-", "_", df[, splitCol]), sep = "_")
names(temp) <- paste(splitCol, seq_along(temp), sep = "_")
cbind(df[setdiff(names(df), splitCol)], temp)
6
  • @zx8754, two ideas: (1) If you're going to use the strsplit approach, use a regular expression and skip the gsub step, and maybe just use do.call(rbind, ...) since (I think) rbind.data.frame is slower (and it gives you funky names). (2) If you're going to use the gsub approach, forget about strsplit and use read.table(text = df_V3, sep = "-"). Nov 19, 2013 at 15:57
  • 1
    But +1 for an answer that should at least point the OP in the right direction ;-) Nov 19, 2013 at 15:59
  • I would upvote if I had enough reputation points. But sadly not yet.
    – CArnold
    Nov 19, 2013 at 16:05
  • 2
    @ChristianArnold, Edit your question with some reproducible data and some examples of what you've tried, and people are sure to give you more up-votes on your question, which in turn will let you vote on answers ;-) Nov 19, 2013 at 16:07
  • @AnandaMahto agree, code is a bit messy, intention was to direct the OP in the right direction, feel free to edit.
    – zx8754
    Nov 19, 2013 at 16:08

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