It should work just fine. If you want to send me a small subset of the your data and the script you are using, I can see what it is doing and suggest a solution. I use that approach all the time to read in data.
On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 8:07 PM, Simon Kiss <simonjk...@yahoo.ca> wrote: > Hi Jim, > Ultimately, I'm going to want to count the frequency of dates by particular > time periods (months, quarters, years) for each state and then plot the data. > I know there are commands in ggplots that will do that, so I'm not too > worried about that, but I was stuck on getting 50 text files (one for each > state) read into R. For the record, using read.table individually on a state > file will get in a useable format, but wasn't working in conjunction with > lapply. > To reiterate, the home file has 50 .txt files each with a column of dates in > the format I sent you. > I will try readLines and see if I can get it to loop through. > Yours, Simon Kiss > On 2011-01-17, at 7:44 PM, jim holtman wrote: > >> It sounds like you want to use 'readLines' and not 'read.table' >> >>> x <- readLines(textConnection("January 11, 2009 >> + January 11, 2009 >> + October 19, 2008 >> + October 13, 2008 >> + August 16, 2008 >> + June 19, 2008 >> + April 19, 2008 >> + April 16, 2008 >> + February 9, 2008 >> + September 2, 2007")) >>> closeAllConnections() >>> x >> [1] "January 11, 2009" "January 11, 2009" "October 19, 2008" >> "October 13, 2008" "August 16, 2008" >> [6] "June 19, 2008" "April 19, 2008" "April 16, 2008" >> "February 9, 2008" "September 2, 2007" >>> >> >> What exactly are you going to do with the data after you read it in? >> >> On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 6:22 PM, Simon Kiss <simonjk...@yahoo.ca> wrote: >>> Dear jim, >>> Yes, it's true, the data are separated onto new lines as follows: >>> January 11, 2009 >>> January 11, 2009 >>> October 19, 2008 >>> October 13, 2008 >>> August 16, 2008 >>> June 19, 2008 >>> April 19, 2008 >>> April 16, 2008 >>> February 9, 2008 >>> September 2, 2007 >>> >>> I tried your attempt and it didn't work either; it returned the error >>> message: >>> Error in FUN(X[[1L]], ...) : >>> 'file' must be a character string or connection >>> >>> On 2011-01-17, at 2:02 PM, jim holtman wrote: >>> >>>> try: >>>> >>>> mylist <- lapply(a, read.table, header = TRUE, sep = '\n') >>>> >>>> also is the separator really '\n' meaning a new-line? What exactly >>>> does the data look like? >>>> >>>> On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 11:47 AM, Simon Kiss <simonjk...@yahoo.ca> wrote: >>>>> Hello, >>>>> I'm trying to read in 50 text filess with dates as content to create a >>>>> list of tables. >>>>> >>>>> a is the list of filenames that need to be read in. >>>>> >>>>> The following command returns the following error >>>>> mylist<-lapply(a, read.table(header=TRUE, sep="\n")) >>>>> >>>>> Error in read.table(header = TRUE, sep = "\n") : >>>>> element 1 is empty; >>>>> the part of the args list of 'is.character' being evaluated was: >>>>> (file) >>>>> >>>>> Does anyone have any suggestions? >>>>> Yours, Simon Kiss >>>>> ********************************* >>>>> Simon J. Kiss, PhD >>>>> Assistant Professor, Wilfrid Laurier University >>>>> 73 George Street >>>>> Brantford, Ontario, Canada >>>>> N3T 2C9 >>>>> Cell: +1 519 761 7606 >>>>> >>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>> R-help@r-project.org mailing list >>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help >>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html >>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Jim Holtman >>>> Data Munger Guru >>>> >>>> What is the problem that you are trying to solve? >>> >>> ********************************* >>> Simon J. Kiss, PhD >>> Assistant Professor, Wilfrid Laurier University >>> 73 George Street >>> Brantford, Ontario, Canada >>> N3T 2C9 >>> Cell: +1 519 761 7606 >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> Jim Holtman >> Data Munger Guru >> >> What is the problem that you are trying to solve? > > ********************************* > Simon J. Kiss, PhD > Assistant Professor, Wilfrid Laurier University > 73 George Street > Brantford, Ontario, Canada > N3T 2C9 > Cell: +1 519 761 7606 > > > > > > > > > > > -- Jim Holtman Data Munger Guru What is the problem that you are trying to solve? ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.