41

I have several different txt files with the same structure. Now I want to read them into R using fread, and then union them into a bigger dataset.

## First put all file names into a list 
library(data.table)
all.files <- list.files(path = "C:/Users",pattern = ".txt")

## Read data using fread
readdata <- function(fn){
    dt_temp <- fread(fn, sep=",")
    keycols <- c("ID", "date")
    setkeyv(dt_temp,keycols)  # Notice there's a "v" after setkey with multiple keys
    return(dt_temp)

}
# then using 
mylist <- lapply(all.files, readdata)
mydata <- do.call('rbind',mylist)

The code works fine, but the speed is not satisfactory. Each txt file has 1M observations and 12 fields.

If I use the fread to read a single file, it's fast. But using apply, then speed is extremely slow, and obviously take much time than reading files one by one. I wonder where went wrong here, is there any improvements for the speed gain?

I tried the llply in plyr package, there're not much speed gains.

Also, is there any syntax in data.table to achieve vertical join like rbind and union in sql?

Thanks.

0

2 Answers 2

61

Use rbindlist() which is designed to rbind a list of data.table's together...

mylist <- lapply(all.files, readdata)
mydata <- rbindlist( mylist )

And as @Roland says, do not set the key in each iteration of your function!

So in summary, this is best :

l <- lapply(all.files, fread, sep=",")
dt <- rbindlist( l )
setkey( dt , ID, date )
5
  • 4
    Also, set they key only once at the end.
    – Roland
    Jan 16, 2014 at 8:17
  • @SimonO'Hanlon, thanks a lot. Is the for loop faster than lapply?
    – Bigchao
    Jan 16, 2014 at 13:22
  • @Bigchao indeterminate. But if you think about it, what do you expect 99.999% of your processing time to be? The computational overhead of either for or lapply or reading in 1e6 observations of data? It's totally arbitrary in this case. I think that memory management might be better using the for loop, and it certainly isn't worse than lapply. There will be no speed difference between the two. Jan 16, 2014 at 13:24
  • If you are calling files outside of your working directory, be sure to add full.names = TRUE to list.files() e.g. list.files(path = "C:/Users",pattern = ".txt",full.names=TRUE). This will attach the full file path to each called file, allowing the lapply function to successfully locate and operate on each file.
    – TheSciGuy
    May 2, 2019 at 15:58
  • This is often still too slow. Here are some 25-50x faster ways stackoverflow.com/a/58131427/1563960
    – webb
    Aug 2, 2021 at 15:46
1

I've re-written the code to do this way too many times.. Finally rolled it into a handy function, below.

data.table_fread_mult <- function(filepaths = NULL, dir = NULL, recursive = FALSE, pattern = NULL, fileCol = FALSE, ...){
  # fread multiple filepaths and then combine the results into a single data.table
  # This function has two interfaces: either
  # 1) provide `filepaths` as a character vector of filepaths to read or 
  # 2) provide `dir` (and optionally `pattern` and `recursive`) to identify the directory to read from
  # If fileCol = TRUE, result will incude a column called File with the full source file path of each record
  # ... should be arguments to pass on to fread()
  # `pattern` is an optional regular expression to match files (e.g. pattern='csv$' matches files ending with 'csv')
  
  if(!is.null(filepaths) & (!is.null(dir) | !is.null(pattern))){
    stop("If `filepaths` is given, `dir` and `pattern` should be NULL")
  } else if(is.null(filepaths) & is.null(dir)){
    stop("If `filepaths` is not given, `dir` should be given")
  }
  
  # If filepaths isn't given, build it from dir, recursive, pattern
  if(is.null(filepaths)){
    filepaths <- list.files(
      path = dir, 
      full.names = TRUE, 
      recursive = recursive, 
      pattern = pattern
    )
  }
  
  # Read and combine files
  if(fileCol){
    return(rbindlist(lapply(filepaths, function(x) fread(x, ...)[, File := x]), use.names = TRUE))
  } else{
    return(rbindlist(lapply(filepaths, fread, ...), use.names = TRUE))
  }
}
2
  • 1
    How can I add a column with file names using this function? For example, if I have sample1.txt sample2.txt sample3.txt in my dir, I would like to read and merge them to one data table with V2 as filename (e.g. sample1). So my data would look like sample1scontent sample1 Jul 19, 2021 at 11:55
  • 1
    This is often still too slow. Here are some 25-50x faster ways stackoverflow.com/a/58131427/1563960
    – webb
    Aug 2, 2021 at 15:46

Your Answer

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

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