Reputation: 2394
I'm trying to import a csv with blanks read as ""
. Unfortunately they're all reading as "NA"
now.
To better demonstrate the problem I'm also showing how NA
, "NA"
, and ""
are all mapping to the same thing (except in the very bottom example), which would prevent the easy workaround dt[is.na(dt)] <- ""
> write.csv(matrix(c("0","",NA,"NA"),ncol = 2),"MRE.csv")
Opening this in notepad, it looks like this
"","V1","V2"
"1","0",NA
"2","","NA"
So reading that back...
> fread("MRE.csv")
V1 V1 V2
1: 1 0 NA
2: 2 NA NA
The documentation seems to suggest this but it does not work as described
> fread("MRE.csv",na.strings = NULL)
V1 V1 V2
1: 1 0 NA
2: 2 NA NA
Also tried this which reads the NA
as an actual NA, but the problem remains for the empty string which is read as "NA"
> fread("MRE.csv",colClasses=c(V1="character",V2="character"))
V1 V1 V2
1: 1 0 <NA>
2: 2 NA NA
> fread("MRE.csv",colClasses=c(V1="character",V2="character"))[,V2]
[1] NA "NA"
data.table version 1.11.4
R version 3.5.1
Upvotes: 4
Views: 2413
Reputation: 160447
A few possible things going on here:
Regardless of you writing "0"
here, the reading function (fread
) is inferring based on looking at a portion of the file. This is not uncommon (readr
does it, too), and is controllable (with colClasses=
).
This might be unique to your question here (and not your real data), but your call to write.csv
is implicitly putting the literal NA
letters in the file (not to be confused with "NA"
where you have the literal string). This might be confusing things, even when you override with colClasses=
.
You might already know this, but since fread
is inferring that those columns are really integer
classes, then they cannot contain empty strings: once determined to be a number column, anything non-number-like will be NA
.
Let's redo your first csv-generating side to make sure we don't confound the situation.
write.csv(matrix(c("0","",NA,"NA"),ncol = 2), "MRE.csv", na="")
(Below, I'm using magrittr
's pipe operator %>%
merely for presentation, it is not required.)
The first example demonstrates fread
's inference. The second shows our overriding that behavior, and now we have blank strings in each NA
spot that is not the literal string "NA"
.
fread("MRE.csv") %>% str
# Classes 'data.table' and 'data.frame': 2 obs. of 3 variables:
# $ V1: int 1 2
# $ V1: int 0 NA
# $ V2: logi NA NA
# - attr(*, ".internal.selfref")=<externalptr>
fread("MRE.csv", colClasses="character") %>% str
# Classes 'data.table' and 'data.frame': 2 obs. of 3 variables:
# $ V1: chr "1" "2"
# $ V1: chr "0" ""
# $ V2: chr "" "NA"
# - attr(*, ".internal.selfref")=<externalptr>
This can also be controlled on a per-column basis. One issue with this example is that fread
is for some reason forcing the column of row-names to be named V1
, the same as the next column. This looks like a bug to me, perhaps you can look at Rdatatable's issues and potentially post a new one. (I might be wrong, perhaps this is intentional/known behavior.)
Because of this, per-column overriding seems to stop at the first occurrence of a column name.
fread("MRE.csv", colClasses=c(V1="character", V2="character")) %>% str
# Classes 'data.table' and 'data.frame': 2 obs. of 3 variables:
# $ V1: chr "1" "2"
# $ V1: int 0 NA
# $ V2: chr "" "NA"
# - attr(*, ".internal.selfref")=<externalptr>
One way around this is to go with an unnamed vector, requiring the same number of classes as the number of columns:
fread("MRE.csv", colClasses=c("character","character","character")) %>% str
# Classes 'data.table' and 'data.frame': 2 obs. of 3 variables:
# $ V1: chr "1" "2"
# $ V1: chr "0" ""
# $ V2: chr "" "NA"
# - attr(*, ".internal.selfref")=<externalptr>
Another way (thanks @thelatemail) is with a list:
fread("MRE.csv", colClasses=list(character=2:3)) %>% str
# Classes 'data.table' and 'data.frame': 2 obs. of 3 variables:
# $ V1: int 1 2
# $ V1: chr "0" ""
# $ V2: chr "" "NA"
# - attr(*, ".internal.selfref")=<externalptr>
Side note: if you need to preserve them as ints/nums, then:
if your concern is about how it affects follow-on calculations, then you can:
if your concern is about how it looks in a report, then whatever tool you are using to render in your report should have a mechanism for how to display NA
values; for example, setting options(knitr.kable.NA="")
before knitr::kable(...)
will present them as empty strings.
if your concern is about how it looks on your console, you have two options:
NA
values to ""
; this only works on character
columns, and is irreversible; ordata.frame
that changes how it is displayed on the console; the benefit to this is that it is non-destructive; the problem is that you have to re-class each object where you want this behavior, and most (if not all) functions that output frames will likely inadvertently strip or omit that class from your input. (You'll need to write an S3 method of print
for your subclass to do this.)Upvotes: 2