1

I'm trying to read this file of a list of countries into R. R can't seem to be able to read it since the imported dataset appears as empty.

This is my code:

universe =  read.csv("country-keyword-list.csv")

No error message appeared. Stata read the file just fine.

This is the link to the CSV file in question:

https://www.searchify.ca/list-of-countries/

4
  • 9
    Have a look at this question. It suggests, read.csv("country-keyword-list.csv", fileEncoding="UTF-16LE"). Maybe this solves the problem.
    – maydin
    Sep 12, 2019 at 14:48
  • 2
    Also use read.table rather than read.csv. The file has no header and no commas. Sep 12, 2019 at 14:53
  • txt <- readLines(fl, skipNul = TRUE);txt <- txt[txt != ""] works. Sep 12, 2019 at 15:50
  • Forgot to mention that fl <- "country-keyword-list.csv". Sep 12, 2019 at 19:52

4 Answers 4

4

@maydin already gave the solution that works in the comments but I thought it would still be useful to show how you could discover it yourself. Note below that the UTF-16LE encoding has the highest confidence.

library(stringi)

u <- "https://www.searchify.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/country-keyword-list.csv"
L <- readLines(u, skipNul = TRUE)
stri_enc_detect(L)[[1]]
##      Encoding Language Confidence
## 1    UTF-16LE                1.00
## 2  ISO-8859-2       cs       0.42
## 3  ISO-8859-1       en       0.21
## 4  ISO-8859-9       tr       0.21
## 5    UTF-16BE                0.10
## 6   Shift_JIS       ja       0.10
## 7     GB18030       zh       0.10
## 8      EUC-JP       ja       0.10
## 9      EUC-KR       ko       0.10
## 10       Big5       zh       0.10

countries <- read.table(u, fileEncoding = "UTF-16LE")
3

This is not a direct answer to your question since it has already been answered by maydin and G. Grothendieck very well, but if you ever struggle again with the file encoding format, I suggest you tried the guess_encoding() function from the readr package, it works pretty well.

install.packages("readr")
readr::guess_encoding("country-keyword-list.csv", n_max = 1000)

It will give an output like this :

  # A tibble: 3 x 2
  encoding   confidence
  <chr>           <dbl>
1 UTF-16LE         1.00   
2 ISO-8859-1       0.51
3 ISO-8859-2       0.38

It will most of the time works very well, so you can almost be sure of what encoding to choose.

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  • 1
    ohhh that's a life-savior! I was playing around with the encoding but all the encodings I tried did not work. This would have saved so much time.Thanks a lot!
    – Rainroad
    Sep 12, 2019 at 17:57
  • Glad I could help, just note that most of the time it will work great but sometime you'll have to double check! Its definitively an excellent function tho.
    – Gainz
    Sep 12, 2019 at 18:30
  • reader::guess_encoding calls stringi::stri_enc_detect which does the real work. Sep 12, 2019 at 20:28
  • Indeed thats in guess_encoding() documentation. But doesn't stri_enc_detect only work for .txt, raw or character vector?
    – Gainz
    Sep 13, 2019 at 14:58
1
universe <-  read.csv("country-keyword-list.csv", fileEncoding="UTF-16LE")
1
  • That's the same as the first comment.
    – Gainz
    Sep 12, 2019 at 15:37
0

Try this:

universe =  read.csv("https://www.searchify.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/country-keyword-list.csv")
0

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