Reading weekday data in R [duplicate] - r

I’m using R version 2.15.3 (2013-03-01) on Ubuntu 12.10. The System is in German and so is R. This comes unhandy when searching for error messages.
Executing R in xterm this way $ LANG="C" R partially solves the issue. Then R displays everything in English. But when loading RStudio this way, the R interpreter is still in German. So I’m looking for a way to change the locale of R in R itself.
I found this: How to change language settings in R, but Sys.setenv(LANG = "en") does’t work for me:
2+x
# Fehler: Objekt 'x' nicht gefunden
Sys.setenv(LANG = "en")
2+x
# Fehler: Objekt 'x' nicht gefunden
I also tried Sys.setenv(LANG = "en_US.UTF-8") with no success.
Output of Sys.getlocale()
Sys.getlocale()
# [1] "LC_CTYPE=de_DE.UTF-8;LC_NUMERIC=C;LC_TIME=de_DE.UTF-8;
# LC_COLLATE=de_DE.UTF-8;LC_MONETARY=de_DE.UTF-8;LC_MESSAGES=de_DE.UTF-8;
# LC_PAPER=C;LC_NAME=C;LC_ADDRESS=C;LC_TELEPHONE=C;LC_MEASUREMENT=de_DE.UTF-8;
# LC_IDENTIFICATION=C"
(linebrakes added for convenience)

Just had the same problem and found the solution that worked for me on Windows/Linux:
Sys.setlocale("LC_ALL","English")

Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", 'en_GB.UTF-8')
Sys.setenv(LANG = "en_US.UTF-8")
This 2 worked for me. No more polish error messages in eclipse R. Though I think only the 2nd had effect. Thanks
edit: although I have to execute those every time i restart R environment.

If you want to do this temporarily, you can try starting R from the command line preceded by setting the language in-line:
# start R with LANGUAGE set to Mandarin
LANGUAGE=zh_CN.UTF-8 R --no-save
# do R stuff
q()
# any LANGUAGE set in your env will be unaffected afterwards
env | grep LANGUAGE

In Ubuntu (14.04) this is the solution that worked for me:
Edit the .Renviron file in your home directory and add this line:
LANGUAGE="en_US.utf8"
# for R with British accent use en_GB.utf8
Then restart R.

In my cases (OSX High Sierra + Ubuntu 14.04) I could switch the language of R output to English only by using this command (with immediate effect without restarting the R session):
Sys.setenv("LANGUAGE"="EN")
To permanently change the language either add the above line to your Rprofile.site file (see ?Startup) or create/edit the file .Renviron in your home folder (~/) and enter a line with LANGUAGE=en or similar (like LANGUAGE="fr_FR.utf8" for French with UTF-8 encoding which is used by default in Linux).

Surprisingly among so many answers I don't see an answer that I would prefer myself.
echo 'LC_ALL=C' >> ~/.Renviron
This will append (or create if doesn't exist) a environment configuration line to .Renviron file which is meant to be used exactly for this purpose.
After that any R process started should already have locale specified in .Renviron file.

Try Sys.setlocale("LC_TIME", "English")

Try:
Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", 'en_GB.UTF-8')
Taken from: http://cran.r-project.org/doc/manuals/r-patched/R-admin.html#Localization-of-messages which should be consulted for further details.

I had the same problem. I solved it by changing my Macbook's system preference->region as US. Then, re-install the R. Then, the system language changed ultimately.
sessionInfo()
locale:
[1] en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8/C/en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8

You just need to
Open Terminal
Write or paste in: defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG
en_US.UTF-8
Close Terminal and restart R
It worked for me in OS X

I think that is an issue of your Ubuntu, not R. If the OS does not have correct locale setting of "en", the R cannot use it. Check out the OS locales. Or using locale 'C' instead of 'en' may work still.
Sys.setenv(LANG='C')

Related

R Console Language Setting [duplicate]

My error messages are displayed in French. How can I change my system language setting so the error messages will be displayed in English?
You can set this using the Sys.setenv() function. My R session defaults to English, so I'll set it to French and then back again:
> Sys.setenv(LANG = "fr")
> 2 + x
Erreur : objet 'x' introuvable
> Sys.setenv(LANG = "en")
> 2 + x
Error: object 'x' not found
A list of the abbreviations can be found here.
Sys.getenv() gives you a list of all the environment variables that are set.
In the case of RStudio for Windows I succeeded in changing the language following the instructions found in R for Windows FAQ, in particular I wrote:
language = EN
inside the file Rconsole (in my installation it is C:\Program Files\R\R-2.15.2\etc\Rconsole); this works also for the command Rscript.
For example you can locate the Rconsole file with this two commands from a command prompt:
cd \
dir Rconsole /s
The first one make the root as the current directory, the second one looks for the Rconsole file.
In the following screenshot you have that Rconsole file is in the folder C:\Program Files\R\R-3.4.1\etc.
You may have more than one location, in that case you may edit all the Rconsole files.
After that you can open the Rconsole file with your favorite editor and look for the line language = and then append EN at the end of that line.
In the following screenshot the interesting line is the number 70 and you have to append EN at the end of it.
For mac users, I found this on the R for Mac FAQ
If you use a non-standard setup (e.g. different language than
formats), you can override the auto-detection performed by setting
`force.LANG' defaults setting, such as for example
defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG en_US.UTF-8
when run in Terminal it will enforce US-english setting regardless of the system
setting. If you don't know what Terminal is you can use this R command
instead:
system("defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG en_US.UTF-8")
but do not forget to quit R and start R.app again afterwards. Please
note that you must always use `.UTF-8' version of the locale,
otherwise R.app will not work properly.
This helped me to change my console language from Chinese to English.
This works from command line :
$ export LANG=en_US.UTF-8
None of the other answers above worked for me
If you use Ubuntu you will set
LANGUAGE=en
in /etc/R/Renviron.site.
You may also want to be aware of the difference between, for example, Sys.setenv(LANG = "ru") and Sys.setlocale(locale = "ru_RU.utf8").
> Sys.setlocale(locale = "ru_RU.utf8")
[1] "LC_CTYPE=ru_RU.utf8;LC_NUMERIC=C;LC_TIME=ru_RU.utf8;LC_COLLATE=ru_RU.utf8;LC_MONETARY=ru_RU.utf8;LC_MESSAGES=en_IE.utf8;LC_PAPER=en_IE.utf8;LC_NAME=en_IE.utf8;LC_ADDRESS=en_IE.utf8;LC_TELEPHONE=en_IE.utf8;LC_MEASUREMENT=en_IE.utf8;LC_IDENTIFICATION=en_IE.utf8"
If you are interested in changing the behaviour of functions that refer to one of these elements (e.g strptime to extract dates), you should use Sys.setlocale().
See ?Sys.setlocale for more details.
In order to see all available languages on a linux system, you can run
system("locale -a", intern = TRUE)
To permanently make it works, in both R and Rstudio (with Win 10),
one way to do this is to run the script every time automatically in the background initially.
No more changing the system language that influence the windows.
No more R only but fail in Rstudio. No more run a script every time manually. No more admin right but fail. No more short-cut setting but fail.
Step 1.
Use your system search, to find the file named "Rprofile"
My response is
C:\Program Files\R\R-4.0.5\library\base\R
C:\Program Files\R\R-4.0.5\etc
Step 2.
Edit C:\Program Files\R\R-4.0.5\library\base\R\Rprofile
The content:
This is the system Rprofile file. It is always run on startup.
Additional commands can be placed in site or user Rprofile files
(see ?Rprofile)
... and so on.
Step 3. Add Sys.setenv(LANGUAGE="en") at the end of the scrip
local({
Sys.setenv(LANGUAGE="en")
})
P.S. If you encounter the issue of authorization/saving,
move this file to desktop and replace the original file after editing.
type this first:
system("defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG en_US.UTF-8")
then you will get a index number(in my case is 127)
then type:
Sys.setenv(LANG = "en")
then type the number and ENTER
127
For me worked:
Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", "en_US.utf8")
Testing:
> Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", "en_US.utf8")
[1] "en_US.utf8"
> x[3]
Error: object 'x' not found
Also working to get english messages:
Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", "C")
To reset to german messages I used
Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", "de_DE.utf8")
Here is the start of my sessionInfo:
> sessionInfo()
R version 3.4.1 (2017-06-30)
Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu (64-bit)
Running under: Ubuntu 16.04.2 LTS
A simple solution would be setting export Lang=C in your bash script.
I had a similar issue where the default language was german so it reverted back to english.
If you want to change R's language in terminal to English forever, this works fine for me in macOS:
Open terminal.app, and say:
touch .bash_profile
Then say:
open -a TextEdit.app .bash_profile
These two commands will help you open ".bash_profile" file in TextEdit.
Add this to ".bash_profile" file:
export LANG=en_US.UTF-8
Then save the file, reopen terminal and type R, you will find it's language has changed to english.
If you want language come back to it's original, just simply add a # before export LANG=en_US.UTF-8.
The only thing that worked for me was uninstalling R entirely (make sure to remove it from the Programs files as well), and install it, but unselect Message Translations during the installation process. When I installed R, and subsequently RCmdr, it finally came up in English.
In Ubuntu 14.04 LTS I had to remove the # from the comment #LANGUAGE=EN.
All other options din not work for me.
Change your current regional format to a different regional format in region settings on time&language settings in Windows by clicking on your time/date in lower right corner > adjust time/date > Region > change regional format to UK or US
This worked for me with a windows 10 laptop in German, where I wanted i.e. lubridate to return dates in English:
Sys.setlocale("LC_TIME", "English")
Im using R Studio on a Mac and I couldn't find the Rconsole file. So I took a more brutal way and just deleted the unwanted language files from the R app.
You just have to go to your Rapp in your application Folder, right click, show package content then /contents/Resources/. There are the language files e.g. English.lproj or in my case de.lproj wich I deleted. After restarting R, error messages appear in English..
Maybe thats helpful!
you simply have to change the basic language of microsoft on your computer!
press the windows button together with r, and tip the following code into the window that is opened
control.exe /name Microsoft.Language
load the language package you want to use and change the options. but take care, this will change also your keyboard layout!
on windows, when you have no admin right, just create a new program shortcut to Rgui.exe. Then in the properties of that shortcut, go to the 'Shortcut' tab and modify the target to include the system language of your choice, e.g. "C:\Program Files\R\R-3.5.3\bin\x64\Rgui.exe" LANGUAGE=en

Setting locale failed

I keep getting the following error message in the R Markdown log:
cropping document_files/figure-latex/ranking_time_output-1.pdf
perl: warning: Setting locale failed.
perl: warning: Please check that your locale settings:
LC_ALL = (unset),
LC_CTYPE = "en_NL.UTF-8",
LANG = "en_US.UTF-8"
are supported and installed on your system.
perl: warning: Falling back to the standard locale ("C").
I've tried numerous things, such as:
Sys.setlocale("LC_ALL", 'en_US.UTF-8')
Sys.setenv(LANG = "en_US.UTF-8")
Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", 'en_GB.UTF-8')
running in R. However, non of this seems to work.
Do I have to do something in the command line or is it an issue that I can fix in R? I'm not an expert in both, so would appreciate help!
RStudio version: 0.99.903, system: Mac OS X 10_11_6
Furthermore I'm located in the Netherlands, but I run everything on my system in English.
LC_CTYPE is set to "en_NL.UTF-8". Such a locale does not exist on Mac OS X (and probably no other OS). Try to find where the wrong setting comes from because it will probably cause other problems, too.
Setting the locale with Sys.setlocale() is useless because Perl is running in a child process created with fork() and exec() and then switches locale based on the process environment.
Setting the environment for the Perl process is probably the right approach but you have to overwrite the erroneous value LC_CTYPE, not LC_ALL:
Sys.setenv(LC_CTYPE = "en_US.UTF-8")
You can set those environment vars by:
sudo vi /etc/environment
add these lines
LANG=en_US.utf-8
LC_ALL=en_US.utf-8

Changed locale in R. Reset failes

OS X 10.9.2 + R 3.0.2 and R 3.1.0
I have set the locale in R with
Sys.setlocale(category = "LC_TIME", locale = "C")
because I wanted English weekday names in my plots. (LC_TIME locale was "de_DE.UTF-8")
This worked, but the change has become permanent. Restarting R gives:
During startup - Warning messages:
1: Setting LC_CTYPE failed, using "C"
..
5: Setting LC_MONETARY failed, using "C"
I tried to reset the locale with these commands:
Sys.setlocale(category = "LC_TIME", locale = "")
Sys.setlocale(category = "LC_ALL", locale = "")
In both cases I got a warning:
..
OS reports request to set locale to "" cannot be honored
I also did reinstall R (in combination with an upgrade from R 3.0.2 to R 3.1.0
Nothing changed. May be the locale settings are stored in a dot-file, which is kept when upgrading, but I can't find where.
So if nobody knows a working reset command, an idea in which file the locale setting is stored may suffice.
Enforcing the language setting with
system("defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG de_DE.UTF-8")
or
system("defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG en_US.UTF-8")
plus restart fixed R on my computer. (I tested both settings.)
R starts now without error
The setting is permanent. I.e. I can quit and restart R and the setting "survives".
The Sys.setlocale(..) command sets the locale temporarily
The reset with Sys.setlocale(.., locale = "") works now!
Information on enforcing the language setting can be found in
R -- Help -- R for Mac OS X FAQ -- 7 Internationalization of the R.app:
If you use a non-standard setup .. you can override the auto-detection ...
Unclear is if it really was the Sys.setlocale() command that corrupted my system, or if it was something I did later. And unclear is if there is a way to reset the system to the original state. That would be in my eyes a more natural solution than enforcing the language setting.
The OP has promised to post a more complete answer but it should be noted that it was in the R-for-MAC-FAQ
7 Internationalization of the R.app

Warning message In download.file: download had nonzero exit status

I am downloading data from data.gov website and I get following two types of errors in the process:
fileUrl <- "http://catalog.data.gov/dataset/expenditures-on-children-by-families"
download.file(fileUrl,destfile=".data/studentdata.csv",method="curl")
Warning message:
In download.file(fileUrl, destfile = ".data/studentdata.csv", method = "curl") :
download had nonzero exit status
I tried to remove the method="curl" as suggested in other forum, but again I get this new error
download.file(fileUrl,destfile=".data/studentdata.csv")
Error in download.file(fileUrl, destfile = ".data/studentdata.csv") :
cannot open destfile '.data/studentdata.csv', reason 'No such file or directory'
I think there are two major factors why your curl doesn't work well.
First, the problem is on your URL. fileUrl <- "http://catalog.data.gov/dataset/expenditures-on-children-by-families". In your URL, it is not referred to a csv file. So, they won't work even if you set the destination into a csv file such as destfile = ".data/studentdata.csv"
I have an example of getting a csv dataset using the same code (different dataset):
DataURL<- "https://data.baltimorecity.gov/api/views/dz54-2aru/rows.csv?accessType=DOWNLOAD" (This link refers to a rows.csv file)
download.file(DataURL, destfile="./data/rows.csv", method="curl") (The method is quite same, using curl)
Second, previously I had the same problem that the curl does not work, even I used a proper URL that refers to a csv file. However, when I diagnosed a bit deeper, I found something interesting fact about why my curl method cannot work properly. It was my R session program. I used a 32-bit R, in which the error occurs. Later then, I tried to change the session into a 64-bit R. Amazingly, and the download status was running at that time. To see your R session architecture (whether you are using 32-bit or 64-bit), type in your R:
sessionInfo()
R version 3.5.3 (2019-03-11)
Platform: x86_64-w64-ming32/x64 (64-bit)
Running under: Windows >= 8 x64 (build 9200)
You have to switch your R, from 32-bit to 64-bit to avoid 'curl' call had nonzero exit status. You go to your R directory folder, and then you run a 64-bit R.
If you are using a Windows OS and installing the R in a default path folder, you can run this C:\Program Files\R\R-3.5.3\bin\x64\R.exe. (I used a version of 3.5.3, so it may be different with your version)
If you are using R-studio, you can switch the R session on the menubar Tools -> Global Options -> R version -> Change -> Use your machine's default version of R64 (64-bit) -> OK. Then restart your R-studio.
However, it depends on your OS architecture. If you are using a 32-bit OS, hence you have to find another way to solve this.
So looking at the code for download.file(...), if you specify method="curl" the function tries to use the curl shell command. If this command does not exist on your system, you will get the error above.
If you do not specify a method, the default is to use an internal R method to download, which evidently works on your system. In that case, the function is trying to put the file in .data/studentdata.csv but evidently there is not .data directory. Try taking out the ..
When this download works, you will get a text/html file, not a csv file. Your url points to a web page, not a download link. That page does have a download link, but unfortunately it is a pdf, not a csv.
Finally, if your goal is to have the data in R (is it?), and if the link actually produces a csv file, you could more easily use
df <- read.csv(fileUrl)
If I'm not very much mistaken you just have a simple typo here. I suspect you have a "data" directory, not a ".data" directory - in which case your only problem is that your destfile string needs to begin "./data", not ".data".
I was having the same problem.
Then I realized that I forget to create the "data" directory!
So try adding this above your fileURL line to create the directory first.
if(!file.exists("data")){
dir.create("data")
}
Also, if you are running a Mac, then you want to keep method="curl" when downloading a https file. I don't believe Windows has that problem hence the suggestions to remove it.
Try this:
file<-'http://catalog.data.gov/dataset/expenditures-on-children-by-families'
file<- read.csv(file)

How to change the locale of R?

I’m using R version 2.15.3 (2013-03-01) on Ubuntu 12.10. The System is in German and so is R. This comes unhandy when searching for error messages.
Executing R in xterm this way $ LANG="C" R partially solves the issue. Then R displays everything in English. But when loading RStudio this way, the R interpreter is still in German. So I’m looking for a way to change the locale of R in R itself.
I found this: How to change language settings in R, but Sys.setenv(LANG = "en") does’t work for me:
2+x
# Fehler: Objekt 'x' nicht gefunden
Sys.setenv(LANG = "en")
2+x
# Fehler: Objekt 'x' nicht gefunden
I also tried Sys.setenv(LANG = "en_US.UTF-8") with no success.
Output of Sys.getlocale()
Sys.getlocale()
# [1] "LC_CTYPE=de_DE.UTF-8;LC_NUMERIC=C;LC_TIME=de_DE.UTF-8;
# LC_COLLATE=de_DE.UTF-8;LC_MONETARY=de_DE.UTF-8;LC_MESSAGES=de_DE.UTF-8;
# LC_PAPER=C;LC_NAME=C;LC_ADDRESS=C;LC_TELEPHONE=C;LC_MEASUREMENT=de_DE.UTF-8;
# LC_IDENTIFICATION=C"
(linebrakes added for convenience)
Just had the same problem and found the solution that worked for me on Windows/Linux:
Sys.setlocale("LC_ALL","English")
Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", 'en_GB.UTF-8')
Sys.setenv(LANG = "en_US.UTF-8")
This 2 worked for me. No more polish error messages in eclipse R. Though I think only the 2nd had effect. Thanks
edit: although I have to execute those every time i restart R environment.
If you want to do this temporarily, you can try starting R from the command line preceded by setting the language in-line:
# start R with LANGUAGE set to Mandarin
LANGUAGE=zh_CN.UTF-8 R --no-save
# do R stuff
q()
# any LANGUAGE set in your env will be unaffected afterwards
env | grep LANGUAGE
In Ubuntu (14.04) this is the solution that worked for me:
Edit the .Renviron file in your home directory and add this line:
LANGUAGE="en_US.utf8"
# for R with British accent use en_GB.utf8
Then restart R.
In my cases (OSX High Sierra + Ubuntu 14.04) I could switch the language of R output to English only by using this command (with immediate effect without restarting the R session):
Sys.setenv("LANGUAGE"="EN")
To permanently change the language either add the above line to your Rprofile.site file (see ?Startup) or create/edit the file .Renviron in your home folder (~/) and enter a line with LANGUAGE=en or similar (like LANGUAGE="fr_FR.utf8" for French with UTF-8 encoding which is used by default in Linux).
Surprisingly among so many answers I don't see an answer that I would prefer myself.
echo 'LC_ALL=C' >> ~/.Renviron
This will append (or create if doesn't exist) a environment configuration line to .Renviron file which is meant to be used exactly for this purpose.
After that any R process started should already have locale specified in .Renviron file.
Try Sys.setlocale("LC_TIME", "English")
Try:
Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", 'en_GB.UTF-8')
Taken from: http://cran.r-project.org/doc/manuals/r-patched/R-admin.html#Localization-of-messages which should be consulted for further details.
I had the same problem. I solved it by changing my Macbook's system preference->region as US. Then, re-install the R. Then, the system language changed ultimately.
sessionInfo()
locale:
[1] en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8/C/en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8
You just need to
Open Terminal
Write or paste in: defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG
en_US.UTF-8
Close Terminal and restart R
It worked for me in OS X
I think that is an issue of your Ubuntu, not R. If the OS does not have correct locale setting of "en", the R cannot use it. Check out the OS locales. Or using locale 'C' instead of 'en' may work still.
Sys.setenv(LANG='C')

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