Le jeudi 10 octobre 2013 à 21:45 -0700, Ira Sharenow a écrit : > Thanks for the suggestion. From R version 3.0.2, I tried > > > > > testDF7 = iconv(x = test07 , from = "UCS-2", to = "") > > > Encoding(testDF7) > > [1] "unknown" > > > > > testDF7[1:6] > > [1] NA NA NA NA NA NA > > > > So using "UCS-2" produced the same results as before. > > > > I do not think there are any NA values. I cleaned up the csv file from > within Excel. Then read it into R > > > sum(is.na(workingDF)) > > [1] 0 > > > > Also the Excel COUNTBLANK function gave me zero. In a previous message, Brian told you to use the 'fileEncoding' argument to read.table(). Please do that.
Regards > On 10/9/2013 11:33 PM, Prof Brian Ripley wrote: > > > On 09/10/2013 10:37, Milan Bouchet-Valat wrote: > > > Le mardi 08 octobre 2013 à 16:02 -0700, Ira Sharenow a écrit : > > > > A colleague is sending me quite a few files that have been saved > > > > with MS > > > > SQL Server 2005. I am using R 2.15.1 on Windows 7. > > > > > > > > I am trying to read in the files using standard techniques. > > > > Although the > > > > file has a csv extension when I go to Excel or WordPad and do > > > > SAVE AS I > > > > see that it is Unicode Text. Notepad indicates that the encoding > > > > is > > > > Unicode. Right now I have to do a few things from within Excel > > > > (such as > > > > Text to Columns) and eventually save as a true csv file before I > > > > can > > > > read it into R and then use it. > > > > > > > > Is there an easy way to solve this from within R? I am also open > > > > to easy > > > > SQL Server 2005 solutions. > > > > > > > > I tried the following from within R. > > > > > > > > testDF = read.table("Info06.csv", header = TRUE, sep = ",") > > > > > > > > > testDF2 = iconv(x = testDF, from = "Unicode", to = "") > > > > > > > > Error in iconv(x = testDF, from = "Unicode", to = "") : > > > > > > > > unsupported conversion from 'Unicode' to '' in codepage 1252 > > > > > > > > # The next line did not produce an error message > > > > > > > > > testDF3 = iconv(x = testDF, from = "UTF-8" , to = "") > > > > > > > > > testDF3[1:6, 1:3] > > > > > > > > Error in testDF3[1:6, 1:3] : incorrect number of dimensions > > > > > > > > # The next line did not produce an error message > > > > > > > > > testDF4 = iconv(x = testDF, from = "macroman" , to = "") > > > > > > > > > testDF4[1:6, 1:3] > > > > > > > > Error in testDF4[1:6, 1:3] : incorrect number of dimensions > > > > > > > > > Encoding(testDF3) > > > > > > > > [1] "unknown" > > > > > > > > > Encoding(testDF4) > > > > > > > > [1] "unknown" > > > > > > > > This is the first few lines from WordPad > > > > > > > > Date,StockID,Price,MktCap,ADV,SectorID,Days,A1,std1,std2 > > > > > > > > 2006-01-03 > > > > 00:00:00.000,@Stock1,2.53,467108197.38,567381.144444444,4,133.14486997089,-0.0162107939626307,0.0346283580367959,0.0126471695454834 > > > > > > > > > > > > 2006-01-03 > > > > 00:00:00.000,@Stock2,1.3275,829803070.531114,6134778.93292,5,124.632223896458,0.071513138376339,0.0410694546850102,0.0172091268025929 > > > > > > > What's the actual problem? You did not state any. Do you get > > > accentuated > > > characters that are not printed correctly after importing the > > > file? In > > > the two lines above it does not look like there would be any > > > non-ASCII > > > characters in this file, so encoding would not matter. > > > > It is most likely UCS-2. That has embedded NULs, so the encoding > > does matter. All 8-bit encodings extend ASCII: others do not, in > > general. > > > > > ______________________________________________ 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.