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I have some files of Micro Data from a Populational Census stored as .txt and coded in ASCII. When I open them in a text editor I get something like: 1100015110001500100100003624008705865085282310200600101011022022 14 444231 etc.

Since I have no expirience with the tabulation of ASCII data I would like to know if there is any way to get this done with R and/or what type of suplementary software do I need.

Actually at first I would like to have a "normal" look at my data, as to say, to see it as a table if possible (the filesizes vary between 40mb and 500mb). Then I would like to make some simple calculations and store the results later as a csv. to use it in other contexts.

Can anyone give me some advice?

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  • You provide insufficient context. In general R is able to handle such text data just fine, and ASCII is a supported encoding. You can specify a fileEncoding for functions such as read.table but you don’t need to in the first place if your data is only numeric. Dec 20, 2012 at 12:18
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    point us to the data files you are looking at! :) Dec 20, 2012 at 12:48
  • the main problem is, that the data appears in ASCII code. I don't know how to convert it to characters or how to use it in this form in R. here is a example for the data ftp.ibge.gov.br/Censos/Censo_Demografico_2010/…
    – Joschi
    Dec 20, 2012 at 12:53
  • @Joschi where is the page that you got this link from? are there SAS import instructions anywhere? Dec 20, 2012 at 12:54
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    If you mean that your source file is supposed to contain the 2- or 3- digit ASCII codes for the actual data, then you have to find out what the format (delimiters, e.g.) is of the source file. Neither R nor any other language can automagically do that for you. Dec 20, 2012 at 13:08

2 Answers 2

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this brazilian census website provides a SAS importation script. the quickest way to import an ASCII data set with only a SAS importation script is to use the SAScii package. you can find the SAS importation script inside this zipped file -- it's INPUT.txt. notice that the INPUT block of those SAS importation instructions don't start until the fourth line, so your beginline parameter will be 4. test out that you're reading the SAS script correctly first with ?parse.SAScii

library(SAScii)
parse.SAScii( "INPUT.txt" , beginline = 4 )

once you see that that's printed the column names and widths correctly, you can use the ?read.SAScii function to directly read your text file into an R data frame

x <- read.SAScii( "filename.txt" , "INPUT.txt" , beginline = 4 )
head( x )

if your file is too big to read entirely into RAM, you can instead read it into a SQLite database. use the read.SAScii.sqlite() function found not in the SAScii package but in my github account here -- it's just a slight variation of the read.SAScii() function, but it doesn't overload RAM. you can see an example of its usage in the download script on this united states government survey data set website.

for more detail about the SAScii package, check out this overview

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    in case you can't find the SAS importation script, even if there's a layout file, you could properly construct a read.fwf call as Romain stated above from importing the excel layout. it has where fields begin and end, so you just have take the starting and ending positions, and use their difference as the width parameter :) good luck! Dec 20, 2012 at 14:29
  • all right. Until know it works just fine with the SAS importation script ;)
    – Joschi
    Dec 20, 2012 at 14:57
  • ok just finished reading the smallest file with 78,344 observations of 187 variables. it took about 4:30 minutes. so maybe it is really good idea to work with a database!
    – Joschi
    Dec 20, 2012 at 15:20
  • @Joschi the SQLite route will actually be slower - try the largest file instead and see if it overloads your RAM :) one other options might be to use parse.SAScii just to determine the field widths, then use fwf2csv in the descr package.. at which point you can read.csv or read.csv.sql and still not overload RAM. there's an example of this being done in the middle of this function Dec 20, 2012 at 15:33
  • @Joschi idk if you can tell, i do this a lot ;) Dec 20, 2012 at 15:34
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A good alternative is the package readr, an extremely fast solution to read fixed column width data. More info on readr here.

So instead of read.SAScii, you can use a faster option based in readr. Like this:

# Load Packages
  library(readr)
  library(SAScii)
  library(data.table)


# Parse input file
  dic_pes2013 <- parse.SAScii("INPUT.txt")

  setDT(dic_pes2013) # convert to data.table

# read to data frame
  pesdata2 <- read_fwf("./Dados/PES2013.txt", 
                       fwf_widths(dput(dic_pes2013[,width]),
                                  col_names=(dput(dic_pes2013[,varname]))),
                                  progress = interactive()
                                  )

I've just read 2.4 million records with 243 variables in 1.2 minutes (file Amostra_Pessoas_35_outras.txt).

ps. if you don't have the input.txt files, here is short script on how to create them.

Note that some variables have decimals, something that is not incorporated in the solutions provided by the answers posted here (at least so far). To take this into account, I would recommend this R script here , which will help you download the 2010 Brazilian Census data sets, read them into data frames and save them as .csv files.

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