I've searched many times, and haven't found the answer here or elsewhere. I want to replace each space ' '
in variables containing file names with a '\ '
. (A use case could be for shell commands, with the spaces escaped, so each file name doesn't appear as a list of arguments.) I have looked through the StackOverflow question "how to replace single backslash in R", and find that many combinations do work as advertised:
> gsub(" ", "\\\\", "a b")
[1] "a\\b"
> gsub(" ", "\\ ", "a b", fixed = TRUE)
[1] "a\\ b"
but try these with a single-slash version, and R ignores it:
> gsub(" ", "\\ ", "a b")
[1] "a b"
> gsub(" ", "\ ", "a b", fixed = TRUE)
[1] "a b"
For the case going in the opposite direction — removing slashes from a string, it works for two:
> gsub("\\\\", " ", "a\\b")
[1] "a b"
> gsub("\\", " ", "a\\b", fixed = TRUE)
[1] "a b"
However, for single slashes some inner perversity in R prevents me from even attempting to remove them:
> gsub("\\", " ", "a\\b")
Error in gsub("\\", " ", "a\\b") :
invalid regular expression '\', reason 'Trailing backslash'
> gsub("\", " ", "a\b", fixed = TRUE)
Error: unexpected string constant in "gsub("\", " ", ""
The 'invalid regular expression' is telling us something, but I don't see what. (Note too that the perl = True
option does not help.)
Even with three back slashes R fails to notice even one:
> gsub(" ", "\\\ ", "a b")
[1] "a b"
The patter extends too! Even multiples of two work:
> gsub(" ", "\\\\\\\\", "a b")
[1] "a\\\\b"
but not odd multiples (should get '\\\ '
:
> gsub(" ", "\\\\\\ ", "a b")
[1] "a\\ b"
> gsub(" ", "\\\ ", "a b", fixed = TRUE)
[1] "a\\ b"
(I would expect 3 slashes, not two.)
My two questions are:
- How can my goal of replacing a
' '
with a'\ '
be accomplished? - Why did the odd number-slash variants of the replacements fail, while the even number-slash replacements worked?
For shell commands a simple work-around is to quote the file names, but part of my interest is just wanting to understand what is going on with R's regex engine.
cat()
ing some of your results -\b
is a backspace character, like\n
is a line-break and\t
is a tab character. E.g. -cat("remove_one_letter_from_the_end\b")
- Two slashes "\\" is actually a single slash - the R console just adds an extra one to escape it.cat("\\", sep="\n")
print()
is doing. However, if I trycat(gsub(" ", "\\ ", "a z"))
, the result is"a z"
with the newline removed — but notice that the z is not escaped, and the space between the letters remains ...gsub
- because a slash can be used to specify things like\s
for a space in regex, it needs to have extra escaping, so R needs\\s
to represent a space. Which means you actually need four slashes "\\\\" to represent a slash because otherwise it will mean nothing -cat(gsub(" ", "\\\\ ", "a z"))