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I want to create a data folder relative to my current directory, i.e. I want to move up one folder, then move down another folder (and sub folder) and create a folder.

dir.create doesn't work because it either only creates the last part of the specified folder or (when setting recursive = TRUE) it will start creating the folder in the root of your working directory.

I'm struggling with this (supposedly) easy task. Any help?

Here's the code I was using and the error I'm getting:

dir.create("../04 Data/Data downloads/new folder")

Warning message:
In dir.create(download_folder) :
  cannot create dir '..\04 Data\Data downloads\new folder', reason 'No such file or directory'

So let's assume this is my current working directory:

"C:/Users/USERNAME/Project/Subfolder/07 R" and now I want to create the following folder:

"C:/Users/USERNAME/Project/Subfolder/04 Data/Data downloads/new folder" How can I do that?

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  • R uses the same conventions as unix, .. refers the the folder "one level up", so you the folder you want to create is dir.create("../04 Data/Data downloads/new folder") Sep 28, 2020 at 14:23
  • And that's exactly what is not working for me. Getting this error: Warning message: In dir.create(download_folder) : cannot create dir '..\04 Data\Data downloads\new folder', reason 'No such file or directory'
    – deschen
    Sep 28, 2020 at 14:27
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    Ah, you should probably put the code you tried and the warning you got in the question - it's very useful information. Sep 28, 2020 at 14:28
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    On my system (Windows), when dir.create("../test") works. dir.create("../test1/test2") gives me your warning if test1 doesn't exist. dir.create("../test1/test2", recursive = TRUE). What system are you on? Are you absolutely sure the .. and recursive = TRUE doesn't work? Sep 28, 2020 at 14:32
  • OK, I'm confused. With recursive= TRUE it now works. Don#t ask me why and what I did differently (I didn't change anything in my code), but previously it created the folder as follows: "C:/Users/USERNAME/Project/04 Data/Data downloads/new folder", so it was leaving out the "subfolder".
    – deschen
    Sep 28, 2020 at 14:39

1 Answer 1

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recursive = TRUE is meant to deal with situations where at least one of the parent directories may not exist.

Without it, effectively what is happening is this:

p <- "../04 Data/Data downloads/new folder"
dirname(p)
# [1] "../04 Data/Data downloads"
if (!dir.exists(dirname(0))) stop("nope")

Whereas with recursive = TRUE, it effectively does this:

p <- "../04 Data/Data downloads/new folder"
paths <- character(0)
while (nzchar(p) && p != ".") { paths <- c(p, paths); p <- dirname(p); }
paths
# [1] ".."                                  
# [2] "../04 Data"                          
# [3] "../04 Data/Data downloads"           
# [4] "../04 Data/Data downloads/new folder"

for (path in paths) if (!dir.exists(path)) dir.create(path)

which should always succeed (unless one of the parent directories is actually a file, or if you don't have permissions).

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