I am having the same problem (#3) with read.table on Darwin. The edit()
function is not a work-around for me since I have to read an enormous
text file. I tried copying the data from TextEdit and pasting it into vi
and Project Builder, but that didn't help at all. I wonder if this is
related to the MacOS convention of ending lines with "\l" instead of
"\n".
The strange thing is that read.delim() seems to work fine.
On Tuesday, February 19, 2002, at 06:22 ?, Jason Boyd wrote:
> Thanks to all who responded. Not all of the advice
> helped me with that particular problem, but, I have
> learned a lot just from your answers.
>
> 1. R for Mac 10 (Carbon version) uses the Mac
> convention of using ":" for the usual Unix "/" and
thanks
> to Dr. Lumley for that since I'm new to R, Mac10, Macs
> in general, and Unix.
> 2. Interestingly, Dr. Ripley suggested to me not to use
> spaces in the path as R wouldn't be able to read them.
> I've found that on my Mac, spaces often come as
> default in file names. As long as I use the ":" (see 1) I
> can also use a space. I'm not sure of the Darwin/
> Xwinows version of R. Looks like another Mac
> convention though.
> 3. The problem is partially solved: I never was able to
> read the data set I made with Mac's TextEdit. But, on
> entering the data at R's runtime window, I was able to
> write.table to an external file, shut down R and/or the
> computer, and come back later to read.table ... no
> problem. Perhaps TextEdit throws some extra code in,
> not sure <although I did save the data as simple text
> and fixed width format, really the only two options I
> could manipulate in TextEdit> I'll try Mac SimpleText (a
> Developer Tool) and emacs to see what happens with
> them.
> 4. Having fun with R!
>
> Thanks again for the help, if things with the text editors
> and read.table change I'll post my findings.
>
> Cheers,
> Jason Boyd
> graduate student
> University of Georgia
> College of Pharmacy
>
> 600 MHz 128 Mb iBook Mac OS 10.1, Fink & DevTools
> Carbonized R1.4.0
>
> ***original message follows***
> From: Ben Bolker <ben at zoo.ufl.edu>
> Date: Tue Feb 19, 2002 09:28:37 X US/Eastern
> To: Jason Boyd <BOYDJ at mail.rx.uga.edu>
> Cc: R help list <r-help at stat.math.ethz.ch>
> Subject: Re: [R] error in read.table on Mac OS 10 ... request for help
> Reply-To: <bolker at zoo.ufl.edu>
>
>
> I haven't seen any answers to this, so I'll try to provide some
other
> things to try (although I don't really know what's going on).
>
> Try getwd() to see how paths appear to be specified internally. You
> could also try setwd("/Users/Shared/rm140_FULL/work") before
> read.table("..."). Also try list.files() to check out the file
names.
>
> It does seem you've been pretty thorough.
>
> good luck,
> Ben Bolker
>
> On Fri, 15 Feb 2002, Jason Boyd wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>> I'm a new user of R, and unsure of why I'm getting an
>> error reading external files on my Mac OS 10 machine.
>> I've read through posts that would seem related (and 'R
>> Import/Export' and 'Introduction to R' as well as
>> pertinent sections in V&R's 'Modern Applied Statistics
>> with S-Plus') but to no avail. If anyone has any
>> suggestions, I'd be very grateful. Here's the problem:
>>
>> When I enter the command:
>>
>>> idusc <- read.table(file = "/Users/Shared/
>> rm140_FULL/work/ioddupb.txt")
>>
>> I get the message:
>>
>> Error in file(file, "r") : cannot open file `/Users/Shared/
>> rm140_FULL/work/ioddupb.txt'
>>
>> This is the correct path according to my Finder
>> window's "path" tab (that is, as far as Users is a folder
>> under /) and also according to the command line
>> interface (shell). I'm not sure why it can't read the file.
>> I'm new to Unix systems also, so perhaps I've
>> misunderstood paths (though I've been reading over
>> Unix tutorials enough not to scare me). Other info:
>>
>> 1. the file was created in simple text mode in Mac
>> TextEdit and saved fixed width text format.
>>
>> 2. when I save the file to another working directory
>> under a different user, I also cannot read.table
>>
>> 3. I checked the priveleges of the .txt file, they were
>> Read & write for the owner and Read for everyone else
>> so that would seem to take care of R being able to copy
>> it.
>>
>> 4. I also tried read.fwf with the same type error
>> message.
>>
>> 5. The tutorials and examples as well as libraries all
>> work fine, I can read data in the libraries, use add-on
>> functions, and plot so it doesn't seem to be a problem
>> with R itself.
>>
>> I'm sure this is just a simple matter but I'm perplexed.
>> Thanks for any suggestions,
>>
>> Jason Boyd
>>
>> graduate student
>> University of Georgia
>> College of Pharmacy
>> boydj at mail.rx.uga.edu
>>
>>
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>
> --
> 318 Carr Hall bolker at zoo.ufl.edu
> Zoology Department, University of Florida
> http://www.zoo.ufl.edu/bolker
> Box 118525 (ph) 352-392-5697
> Gainesville, FL 32611-8525 (fax) 352-392-3704
>
>
>
>
http://www.mcg.edu/research/biostat/bickel.html
David R. Bickel, PhD
Assistant Professor
Medical College of Georgia
Office of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics
1120 Fifteenth St., AE-3037
Augusta, GA 30912-4900
Tel.: 706-721-4697; Fax: 706-721-6294
E-mail: dbickel at mail.mcg.edu or bickel at prueba.info
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