1

I have a Stata dta raw data file that includes a string vector with . Once imported into R using the foreign package, my data look like the following:

# dput(dat[1:3, 218])
# c("", "I want very much\xc9will do whatever it takes", "I want very much\xc9will do my fair share"

For this example, I'll create an object called test:

test <- c("", "I want very much\xc9will do whatever it takes", "I want very much\xc9will do my fair share")

I want to convert test to a factor, but I just get all NAs. I've tried two approaches:

factor(test,
       levels=c("I want very much\\xc9will do whatever it takes",
                "I want very much\\xc9will do my fair share"),
       labels=c(1, 2))
# [1] <NA> <NA> <NA>
# Levels: 1 2

factor(test,
       levels=c("I want very much…will do whatever it takes",
                "I want very much…will do my fair share"),
       labels=c(1, 2))
# [1] <NA> <NA> <NA>
# Levels: 1 2

I know I could edit the dta file, but I don't want to touch the raw data. What else can I try?

In the end, I want the following:

#[1] <NA> 1    2   
#Levels: 1 2
0

3 Answers 3

1

Don't use \\ to escape your special characters. This works:

factor(test,
       levels=c("I want very much\xc9will do whatever it takes",
                "I want very much\xc9will do my fair share"),
       labels=c(1, 2))

#[1] <NA> 1    2   
#Levels: 1 2
2
  • +1. I didn't notice that the levels used are different from the strings in the test
    – akrun
    Aug 20, 2014 at 4:44
  • Thanks. I was confused by the double `\` displayed in R output.
    – Eric Green
    Aug 20, 2014 at 11:02
0
test <- c(NA, "I want very much\xc9will do my fair share", "I want very much\xc9will do whatever it takes")

ana <- as.factor(test)

library(plyr)

bob <- revalue(ana, c("I want very much\xc9will do my fair share" = "1",
                  "I want very much\xc9will do whatever it takes" = "2"))
bob

Does this work for you?

9
  • factors with labels 1 and 2. but the levels i define are not found because of the encoding issue.
    – Eric Green
    Aug 20, 2014 at 1:58
  • OK; i think you have É in test: Is that right? I created the following. Then, I called as.factor. I can see all letters fine and all levels appeared on my machine. Am I getting what you want? test2 <- c("ɮÉèèéé", "I want very much\xc9will do whatever it takes", "I want very much\xc9will do my fair share")
    – jazzurro
    Aug 20, 2014 at 2:05
  • not quite. i want your test2[2] and test2[3] to have labels 1 and 2, respectively.
    – Eric Green
    Aug 20, 2014 at 2:10
  • I am trying to reach you. Are you saying that you want to change the names of the factors? Like "I want very much\xc9will do my fair share" to "1", for example?
    – jazzurro
    Aug 20, 2014 at 2:39
  • thanks for taking an interest. i edited my question to show my desired output. i hope this makes it clearer.
    – Eric Green
    Aug 20, 2014 at 2:42
0

From looking at your expected output, may be:

 factor(as.vector(setNames(1:2,unique(test[test!='']))[test]))
 #[1] <NA> 1    2   
 #Levels: 1 2

Just noticed from @thelatemail's reply that your levels don't match with the test string. For example.

 test1 <- c("", "I want very much\\xc9will do whatever it takes", "I want very much\\xc9will do my fair share")  #using `\\`
 factor(test1, levels= unique(test1[test1!='']), labels=1:2)
 #[1] <NA> 1    2   
 #Levels: 1 2

If you do:

 factor(test1, levels= unique(test[test!='']), labels=1:2)
 #[1] <NA> <NA> <NA>
 #Levels: 1 2

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.