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Here I have a .csv dataset containing 120211 observations for 19 variables.
Using read.table("test.csv",header=TRUE,sep=",") will yield the following error:

scan(file, what, nmax, sep, dec, quote, skip, nlines, na.strings, : line 19 has no 19 variables

Then I add the fill=TRUE in read.table arguments and no error will be shown. However using this will only yield 41451 observations. And the 41451st observation is actually the last one in my test.csv.

Can anyone help me ? Thanks.

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  • If you have a .csv file why don't you use read.csv?
    – etienne
    Oct 29, 2015 at 12:35

1 Answer 1

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Without the dataset it is hard to check what the problem is. I suppose in line 41453 there is in one cell (string/text) an additional comma. Are the text/string variables quoted? Just try to check the line 41453 (because you have to count the header line, too) with a text editor like notepad++ to identify your problem.

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  • could you tell me your email?So I can send you the dataset. It's originally an .xlsx and I save as .csv. please. I am a fresh for R.
    – Burry Xie
    Oct 29, 2015 at 12:53
  • thanks. i fix the problem when I tried using the original syntax read.table("test.csv",header=TRUE,sep=",")
    – Burry Xie
    Oct 29, 2015 at 13:31

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