On 29/05/2008, at 1:48 PM, Gundala Viswanath wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Suppose I have the following tabular data:
>
>
> 1729_at | TRADD | TNFRSF1A-associated via death domain | protein-
> coding
> 1773_at | FNTB | farnesyltransferase, CAAX box, beta | protein-coding
> 177_at | PLD1 | phospholipase D1, phosphatidylcholine-specific |
> protein-coding
>
>
> What is the right separator used for read.table function?
>
> I tried this:
>
> dat <- read.table("geo2geneinfo_bymodel.txt", sep =
"|")
> print(dat)
>
> It doesn't seem to work. It flattens the table above into just two
> columns
> meaning only contain $V1 and $V2.
>
> sep=" | " also won't work.
I created a test file ``gorp'':
$ cat gorp
1 | 2 | 3
4 | 5 | 6
7 | 8 | 9
I then (in R) did
> gorp <- read.table("gorp",sep="|")
and got
> gorp
V1 V2 V3
1 1 2 3
2 4 5 6
3 7 8 9
No problema. I then copied and pasted your sample data into a file
``mung'' and did
> mung <- read.table("mung",sep="|")
and got
> mung
V1 V2 V3
1 1729_at TRADD TNFRSF1A-associated via death domain
2 1773_at FNTB farnesyltransferase, CAAX box, beta
3 177_at PLD1 phospholipase D1, phosphatidylcholine-specific
V4
1 protein-coding
2 protein-coding
3 protein-coding
Again, no problema. So there's something funny about your system, or
there are non-printing
characters in your data file which did not show up in the sample
lines of the data file that
you posted. Or ``they'' are just out to get you! :-) (I know the
feeling ....)
cheers,
Rolf Turner
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