I need to automate R to read a csv datafile that's into a zip file.
For example, I would type:
read.zip(file = "myfile.zip")
And internally, what would be done is:
Unzip myfile.zip to a temporary folder
Read the only file contained on it using read.csv
If there is more than one file into the zip file, an error is thrown.
My problem is to get the name of the file contained into the zip file, in orded to provide it do the read.csv command. Does anyone know how to do it?
UPDATE
Here's the function I wrote based on #Paul answer:
read.zip <- function(zipfile, row.names=NULL, dec=".") {
# Create a name for the dir where we'll unzip
zipdir <- tempfile()
# Create the dir using that name
dir.create(zipdir)
# Unzip the file into the dir
unzip(zipfile, exdir=zipdir)
# Get the files into the dir
files <- list.files(zipdir)
# Throw an error if there's more than one
if(length(files)>1) stop("More than one data file inside zip")
# Get the full name of the file
file <- paste(zipdir, files[1], sep="/")
# Read the file
read.csv(file, row.names, dec)
}
Since I'll be working with more files inside the tempdir(), I created a new dir inside it, so I don't get confused with the files. I hope it may be useful!
Another solution using unz:
read.zip <- function(file, ...) {
zipFileInfo <- unzip(file, list=TRUE)
if(nrow(zipFileInfo) > 1)
stop("More than one data file inside zip")
else
read.csv(unz(file, as.character(zipFileInfo$Name)), ...)
}
You can use unzip to unzip the file. I just mention this as it is not clear from your question whether you knew that. In regard to reading the file. Once your extracted the file to a temporary dir (?tempdir), just use list.files to find the files that where dumped into the temporary directory. In your case this is just one file, the file you need. Reading it using read.csv is then quite straightforward:
l = list.files(temp_path)
read.csv(l[1])
assuming your tempdir location is stored in temp_path.
I found this thread as I was trying to automate reading multiple csv files from a zip. I adapted the solution to the broader case. I haven't tested it for weird filenames or the like, but this is what worked for me so I thought I'd share:
read.csv.zip <- function(zipfile, ...) {
# Create a name for the dir where we'll unzip
zipdir <- tempfile()
# Create the dir using that name
dir.create(zipdir)
# Unzip the file into the dir
unzip(zipfile, exdir=zipdir)
# Get a list of csv files in the dir
files <- list.files(zipdir)
files <- files[grep("\\.csv$", files)]
# Create a list of the imported csv files
csv.data <- sapply(files, function(f) {
fp <- file.path(zipdir, f)
return(read.csv(fp, ...))
})
return(csv.data)}
If you have zcat installed on your system (which is the case for linux, macos, and cygwin) you could also use:
zipfile<-"test.zip"
myData <- read.delim(pipe(paste("zcat", zipfile)))
This solution also has the advantage that no temporary files are created.
Here is an approach I am using that is based heavily on #Corned Beef Hash Map 's answer. Here are some of the changes I made:
My approach makes use of the data.table package's fread(), which
can be fast (generally, if it's zipped, sizes might be large, so you
stand to gain a lot of speed here!).
I also adjusted the output format so that it is a named list, where
each element of the list is named after the file. For me, this was a
very useful addition.
Instead of using regular expressions to sift through the files
grabbed by list.files, I make use of list.file()'s pattern
argument.
Finally, I by relying on fread() and by making pattern an
argument to which you could supply something like "" or NULL or
".", you can use this to read in many types of data files; in fact,
you can read in multiple types of at once (if your .zip contains
.csv, .txt in you want both, e.g.). If there are only some types of
files you want, you can specify the pattern to only use those, too.
Here is the actual function:
read.csv.zip <- function(zipfile, pattern="\\.csv$", ...){
# Create a name for the dir where we'll unzip
zipdir <- tempfile()
# Create the dir using that name
dir.create(zipdir)
# Unzip the file into the dir
unzip(zipfile, exdir=zipdir)
# Get a list of csv files in the dir
files <- list.files(zipdir, rec=TRUE, pattern=pattern)
# Create a list of the imported csv files
csv.data <- sapply(files,
function(f){
fp <- file.path(zipdir, f)
dat <- fread(fp, ...)
return(dat)
}
)
# Use csv names to name list elements
names(csv.data) <- basename(files)
# Return data
return(csv.data)
}
The following refines the above answers. FUN could be read.csv, cat, or anything you like, providing the first argument will accept a file path. E.g.
head(read.zip.url("http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/Downloads/ICD-9-CM-v32-master-descriptions.zip", filename = "CMS32_DESC_LONG_DX.txt"))
read.zip.url <- function(url, filename = NULL, FUN = readLines, ...) {
zipfile <- tempfile()
download.file(url = url, destfile = zipfile, quiet = TRUE)
zipdir <- tempfile()
dir.create(zipdir)
unzip(zipfile, exdir = zipdir) # files="" so extract all
files <- list.files(zipdir)
if (is.null(filename)) {
if (length(files) == 1) {
filename <- files
} else {
stop("multiple files in zip, but no filename specified: ", paste(files, collapse = ", "))
}
} else { # filename specified
stopifnot(length(filename) ==1)
stopifnot(filename %in% files)
}
file <- paste(zipdir, files[1], sep="/")
do.call(FUN, args = c(list(file.path(zipdir, filename)), list(...)))
}
Another approach that uses fread from the data.table package
fread.zip <- function(zipfile, ...) {
# Function reads data from a zipped csv file
# Uses fread from the data.table package
## Create the temporary directory or flush CSVs if it exists already
if (!file.exists(tempdir())) {dir.create(tempdir())
} else {file.remove(list.files(tempdir(), full = T, pattern = "*.csv"))
}
## Unzip the file into the dir
unzip(zipfile, exdir=tempdir())
## Get path to file
file <- list.files(tempdir(), pattern = "*.csv", full.names = T)
## Throw an error if there's more than one
if(length(file)>1) stop("More than one data file inside zip")
## Read the file
fread(file,
na.strings = c(""), # read empty strings as NA
...
)
}
Based on the answer/update by #joão-daniel
unzipped file location
outDir<-"~/Documents/unzipFolder"
get all the zip files
zipF <- list.files(path = "~/Documents/", pattern = "*.zip", full.names = TRUE)
unzip all your files
purrr::map(.x = zipF, .f = unzip, exdir = outDir)
I just wrote a function based on top read.zip that may help...
read.zip <- function(zipfile, internalfile=NA, read.function=read.delim, verbose=TRUE, ...) {
# function based on http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8986818/automate-zip-file-reading-in-r
# check the files within zip
unzfiles <- unzip(zipfile, list=TRUE)
if (is.na(internalfile) || is.numeric(internalfile)) {
internalfile <- unzfiles$Name[ifelse(is.na(internalfile),1,internalfile[1])]
}
# Create a name for the dir where we'll unzip
zipdir <- tempfile()
# Create the dir using that name
if (verbose) catf("Directory created:",zipdir,"\n")
dir.create(zipdir)
# Unzip the file into the dir
if (verbose) catf("Unzipping file:",internalfile,"...")
unzip(zipfile, file=internalfile, exdir=zipdir)
if (verbose) catf("Done!\n")
# Get the full name of the file
file <- paste(zipdir, internalfile, sep="/")
if (verbose)
on.exit({
catf("Done!\nRemoving temporal files:",file,".\n")
file.remove(file)
file.remove(zipdir)
})
else
on.exit({file.remove(file); file.remove(zipdir);})
# Read the file
if (verbose) catf("Reading File...")
read.function(file, ...)
}
Related
I'm trying to import several SAS datafiles from a folder and then save them back into the folder as R dataframes with the same original SAS dataset name. Everything works except I can't figure out how to save the file with the original file name (i.e., I can't figure out the x in > save(xxx, file = ...).
The code I've tried is as follows:
path <- "path to folder with sas files"
list.files(pattern=".sas7bdat$")
list.filenames<-list.files(pattern=".sas7bdat$")
for (i in 1:length(list.filenames)){
assign(list.filenames[i], read_sas(list.filenames[i]))
filename <- paste(list.filenames[i])
save(list.filenames[i],file = paste0(path, paste(list.filenames[i], "Rdat", sep = ".")))
}
doesn't work...
for (i in 1:length(list.filenames)){
assign(list.filenames[i], read_sas(list.filenames[i]))
filename <- paste(list.filenames[i])
save(list.filenames[[i]],file = paste0(path, paste(list.filenames[i], "Rdat", sep = ".")))
}
doesn't work
for (i in 1:length(list.filenames)){
assign(list.filenames[i], read_sas(list.filenames[i]))
filename <- paste(list.filenames[i])
save(filename,file = paste0(path, paste(list.filenames[i], "Rdat", sep = ".")))
}
Any help on figuring out how to save the files with the original names from list.filenames[i]?
Use the "list" argument of save. Something like
path <- "path to folder with sas files"
list.filenames <- list.files(path, pattern="\\.sas7bdat$")
for (i in list.filenames) {
datName <- tools::file_path_sans_ext(i)
assign(datName, read_sas(i))
save(list=datName, file = paste0(path, paste(datName, "Rdat", sep = ".")))
}
would work. Also, I imagine you want pattern=".sas7bdat$" as pattern="\\.sas7bdat$, since "." is a wildcard in regex.
I have a number of (sub)folders stored within a directory folder. Each subfolder contains 5-35 .jpg aerial photograph files that are named by flightline name and number (ie: bej-3-83). I would like to add a suffix to each of these files based upon the subfolder they are stored upon. For example if 'bej-3-83' is stored within 'T13N_10W' subfolder I would like my R script to rename 'bej-3-83' as 'bej-3-83-T13N_10W' and so forth for each file stored within each subfolder.
I can partially accomplish this process albeit still with more manual input than I'd like using this script:
folder = "C:\\...\\T23N_R14W"
files <- list.files(folder,pattern = "\\.jpg$",full.names = T)
files
sapply(files,FUN=function(eachPath){
file.rename(from=eachPath,to= sub(pattern="_clip", paste0("_T23N_R14W"),eachPath))
})
But as you can see this script uses a manual paste input of the subfolder name which isn't useful when you're trying to create a script that does what I need in one fell swoop.
I'm seeing similar questions and answers which utilize 'pushd' and 'popd' and I've attached to of those threads below as links. I'm trying to read as much as I can on these functions but so far the process to make it work has me stuck.
How to rename files in folders to foldername using batch file
Rename Files Based On Folder Name
Sincerely,
Henry
You might have to change the dir_separator to \ on windows:
make_filename <- function(file_path) {
s <- unlist(strsplit(file_path, dir_separator))
fname <- gsub('\\.jpg$', '', s[length(s)])
parent_dir <- s[(length(s) - 1)]
new_fname <- paste0(parent_dir, "_", fname, '.jpg')
path <- paste(s[-length(s)], collapse = dir_separator)
return(paste(path, new_fname, sep = dir_separator))
}
folder = './data'
dir_separator = '/'
files <- paste0(folder, dir_separator, list.files(folder, recursive = T))
sapply(files, function(x) file.rename(from = x, to = make_filename(x)))
A recursive approach.
Pass the path to the root folder containing your files and the extension of the files you want to rename, to rename_batch.
Defaults are working directory and jpeg.
library(stringr)
# An auxiliary function
rename_file <- function(str, extra){
file_name <- tools::file_path_sans_ext(str)
file_ext <- tools::file_ext(str)
return(paste0(file_name, '-', extra, '.', file_ext))
}
rename_batch <- function(path = "./",
extension = 'jpeg'){
# Separate files from folders
l <- list.files(path)
files <- l[grepl(paste0("\\." , extension), l)]
folders <- list.dirs(path, F, F)
present_folder <-
stringr::str_extract(path, '(?<=/)([^/]+)$')
# Check if there is a / at the end of path and removes it
# for consistency
path_len <- nchar(path)
last <- substr(path, path_len, path_len)
if (last == '/') {
path <- substr(path, 1, path_len - 1)
}
if (length(files) > 0) {
file_updtate <- paste0(path, '/', files)
file.rename(file_updtate, rename_file(file_updtate, present_folder))
}
if (length(folders) > 0) {
for (i in paste0(path, '/', folders)) {
cat('Renaming in:', i, '\n')
rename_batch(i)
}
}
}
Suppose I have file_a.R. It is sourced via R's base source function by some other files file_b.R, file_c.R, which are located in the same folder or sub folder. Is there an easy way to get the paths of file_b.R and file_c.R given the path of file_a.R?
EDIT:
If you want to get all links between R files, and some files that are sourced in those files, you can use something like that:
library(stringr)
#Get all R files paths in working directory and subdirectories
filelist <- lapply(list.files(
pattern = "[.]R$", recursive = TRUE
), print)
#Extract one file's sources
getSources <- function(file, pattern) {
#Store all file lines in a character vector
lines <- readLines(file, warn = FALSE)
#Extract R-filenames starting with "pattern" in all lines containing "source"
sources <- lapply(lines, function(x) {
if (length(grep("source", x) > 0)) {
str_extract(x, paste0(pattern, ".*[.]R"))
}
else{
NA
}
})
#Remove NA (lines without source)
sources <- sources[!is.na(sources)]
#Return a list
list(path = file,
pattern = pattern,
sources = unlist(sources))
}
#Example
corresp <- lapply(X = filelist, FUN = getSources, pattern = "file")
It will return a list of:
$path: R file path
$pattern: pattern used to match sources
$sources: the name of the sourced file
And you'll be able to see if anything is sourced anywhere, including file_A.
I'm trying to read a list of files and append them into a new file with all the records. I do not intend to change anything in the original files. I've tried couple of methods.
Method 1: This methods creates a new file but at each iteration the previous file gets added again. Because I'm binding the data frame recursively.
files <- list.files(pattern = "\\.csv$")
#temparary data frame to load the contents on the current file
temp_df <- data.frame(ModelName = character(), Object = character(),stringsAsFactors = F)
#reading each file within the range and append them to create one file
for (i in 1:length(files)){
#read the file
currentFile = read.csv(files[i])
#Append the current file
temp_df = rbind(temp_df, currentFile)
}
#writing the appended file
write.csv(temp_df,"Models_appended.csv",row.names = F,quote = F)
Method 2: I got this method from Rbloggers . This methods won't write to a new file but keeps on modifying the original file.
multmerge = function(){
filenames= list.files(pattern = "\\.csv$")
datalist = lapply(filenames, function(x){read.csv(file=x,header=T)})
Reduce(function(x,y) {merge(x,y)}, temp_df)
}
Can someone advice me on how to achieve my goal?
it could look like this:
files <- list.files(pattern = "\\.csv$")
DF <- read.csv(files[1])
#reading each file within the range and append them to create one file
for (f in files[-1]){
df <- read.csv(f) # read the file
DF <- rbind(DF, df) # append the current file
}
#writing the appended file
write.csv(DF, "Models_appended.csv", row.names=FALSE, quote=FALSE)
or short:
files <- list.files(pattern = "\\.csv$")
DF <- read.csv(files[1])
for (f in files[-1]) DF <- rbind(DF, read.csv(f))
write.csv(DF, "Models_appended.csv", row.names=FALSE, quote=FALSE)
You can use this to load everything into one data set.
dataset <- do.call("rbind", lapply(file.list, FUN = function(file) {
read.table(file, header=TRUE, sep="\t")
}))
And then just save with write.csv.
Or you could go ahead and use shell commands in R:
system2("cat", args = "*.csv", stdout = "appendedfiles.csv")
This would be for unix based systems; I'm not sure what you would do for windows.
Try this for your ListOfFileNames:
ListOfFileNames<-list.files(pattern=".txt")
outFile <- file("all.txt", "w")
for (i in ListOfFileNames){
x <- readLines(i)
writeLines(x, outFile) # in the link the 1st and last line are skipped
}
close(outFile)
Source: https://r.789695.n4.nabble.com/R-Read-multiple-text-files-and-combine-into-single-file-td817344.html
There's an easy answer with rbind_list() now!
For instance:
dataFiles = map(Sys.glob("*.csv"), read.csv)
or however you're reading the files into a list
dat = rbind_list(dataFiles)
and dat will be what you're looking for!
If using Windows, it's easy to do this using the command prompt.
Start -> Run -> type "cmd" and hit return key
cd <path to folder>
copy /b *.txt <outputname>.txt
Concrete example:
cd C:\User\danny\docs\folder_with_txt files
copy /b *.txt concatenated.txt
Note that if you're changing drive letters to do this before cd
D:\> c:
C:\> cd C:\User\danny\docs\folder_with_txt files
copy /b *.txt concatenated.txt
I have a multiple-step file download process I would like to do within R. I have got the middle step, but not the first and third...
# STEP 1 Recursively find all the files at an ftp site
# ftp://prism.oregonstate.edu//pub/prism/pacisl/grids
all_paths <- #### a recursive listing of the ftp path contents??? ####
# STEP 2 Choose all the ones whose filename starts with "hi"
all_files <- sapply(sapply(strsplit(all_paths, "/"), rev), "[", 1)
hawaii_log <- substr(all_files, 1, 2) == "hi"
hi_paths <- all_paths[hawaii_log]
hi_files <- all_files[hawaii_log]
# STEP 3 Download & extract from gz format into a single directory
mapply(download.file, url = hi_paths, destfile = hi_files)
## and now how to extract from gz format?
For part 1, RCurl might be helpful. The getURL function retrieves one or more URLs; dirlistonly lists the contents of the directory without retrieving the file. The rest of the function creates the next level of url
library(RCurl)
getContent <- function(dirs) {
urls <- paste(dirs, "/", sep="")
fls <- strsplit(getURL(urls, dirlistonly=TRUE), "\r?\n")
ok <- sapply(fls, length) > 0
unlist(mapply(paste, urls[ok], fls[ok], sep="", SIMPLIFY=FALSE),
use.names=FALSE)
}
So starting with
dirs <- "ftp://prism.oregonstate.edu//pub/prism/pacisl/grids"
we can invoke this function and look for things that look like directories, continuing until done
fls <- character()
while (length(dirs)) {
message(length(dirs))
urls <- getContent(dirs)
isgz <- grepl("gz$", urls)
fls <- append(fls, urls[isgz])
dirs <- urls[!isgz]
}
we could then use getURL again, but this time on fls (or elements of fls, in a loop) to retrieve the actual files. Or maybe better open a url connection and use gzcon to decompress and process on the file. Along the lines of
con <- gzcon(url(fls[1], "r"))
meta <- readLines(con, 7)
data <- scan(con, integer())
I can read the contents of the ftp page if I start R with the internet2 option. I.e.
C:\Program Files\R\R-2.12\bin\x64\Rgui.exe --internet2
(The shortcut to start R on Windows can be modified to add the internet2 argument - right-click /Properties /Target, or just run that at the command line - and obvious on GNU/Linux).
The text on that page can be read like this:
download.file("ftp://prism.oregonstate.edu//pub/prism/pacisl/grids", "f.txt")
txt <- readLines("f.txt")
It's a little more work to parse out the Directory listings, then read them recursively for the underlying files.
## (something like)
dirlines <- txt[grep("Directory <A HREF=", txt)]
## split and extract text after "grids/"
split1 <- sapply(strsplit(dirlines, "grids/"), function(x) rev(x)[1])
## split and extract remaining text after "/"
sapply(strsplit(split1, "/"), function(x) x[1])
[1] "dem" "ppt" "tdmean" "tmax" "tmin"
It's about here that this stops seeming very attractive, and gets a bit laborious so I would actually recommend a different option. There would no doubt be a better solution perhaps with RCurl, and I would recommend learning to use and ftp client for you and your user. Command line ftp, anonymous logins, and mget all works pretty easily.
The internet2 option was explained for a similar ftp site here:
https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-help/2009-January/184647.html
ftp.root <- where are the files
dropbox.root <- where to put the files
#=====================================================================
# Function that downloads files from URL
#=====================================================================
fdownload <- function(sourcelink) {
targetlink <- paste(dropbox.root, substr(sourcelink, nchar(ftp.root)+1,
nchar(sourcelink)), sep = '')
# list of contents
filenames <- getURL(sourcelink, ftp.use.epsv = FALSE, dirlistonly = TRUE)
filenames <- strsplit(filenames, "\n")
filenames <- unlist(filenames)
files <- filenames[grep('\\.', filenames)]
dirs <- setdiff(filenames, files)
if (length(dirs) != 0) {
dirs <- paste(sourcelink, dirs, '/', sep = '')
}
# files
for (filename in files) {
sourcefile <- paste(sourcelink, filename, sep = '')
targetfile <- paste(targetlink, filename, sep = '')
download.file(sourcefile, targetfile)
}
# subfolders
for (dirname in dirs) {
fdownload(dirname)
}
}