Imported a csv-dataset to R but the values becomes factors

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灰色年华
灰色年华 2020-11-29 01:19

I am very new to R and I am having trouble accessing a dataset I\'ve imported. I\'m using RStudio and used the Import Dataset function when importing my csv-file and pasted

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  • 2020-11-29 01:49

    When importing csv data files the import command should reflect both the data seperation between each column (;) and the float-number seperator for your numeric values (for numerical variable = 2,5 this would be ",").

    The command for importing a csv, therefore, has to be a bit more comprehensive with more commands:

        stuckey <- read.csv2("C:/kalle/R/stuckey.csv", header=TRUE, sep=";", dec=",")
    

    This should import all variables as either integers or numeric.

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  • 2020-11-29 01:52

    None of these answers mention the colClasses argument which is another way to specify the variable classes in read.csv.

     stuckey <- read.csv("C:/kalle/R/stuckey.csv", colClasses = "numeric") # all variables to numeric
    

    or you can specify which columns to convert:

    stuckey <- read.csv("C:/kalle/R/stuckey.csv", colClasses = c("PTS" = "numeric", "MP" = "numeric") # specific columns to numeric
    

    Note that if a variable can't be converted to numeric then it will be converted to factor as default which makes it more difficult to convert to number. Therefore, it can be advisable just to read all variables in as 'character' colClasses = "character" and then convert the specific columns to numeric once the csv is read in:

    stuckey <- read.csv("C:/kalle/R/stuckey.csv", colClasses = "character")
    point <- as.numeric(stuckey$PTS)
    time <- as.numeric(stuckey$MP)
    
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  • 2020-11-29 01:53

    By default, read.csv checks the first few rows of your data to see whether to treat each variable as numeric. If it finds non-numeric values, it assumes the variable is character data, and character variables are converted to factors.

    It looks like the PTS and MP variables in your dataset contain non-numerics, which is why you're getting unexpected results. You can force these variables to numeric with

    point <- as.numeric(as.character(point))
    time <- as.numeric(as.character(time))
    

    But any values that can't be converted will become missing. (The R FAQ gives a slightly different method for factor -> numeric conversion but I can never remember what it is.)

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  • 2020-11-29 01:53

    This only worked right for me when including strip.white = TRUE in the read.csv command.

    (I found the solution here.)

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  • 2020-11-29 01:56

    I'm new to R as well and faced the exact same problem. But then I looked at my data and noticed that it is being caused due to the fact that my csv file was using a comma separator (,) in all numeric columns (Ex: 1,233,444.56 instead of 1233444.56).

    I removed the comma separator in my csv file and then reloaded into R. My data frame now recognises all columns as numbers.

    I'm sure there's a way to handle this within the read.csv function itself.

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  • 2020-11-29 01:59

    for me the solution was to include skip = 0 (number of rows to skip at the top of the file. Can be set >0)

    mydata <- read.csv(file = "file.csv", header = TRUE, sep = ",", skip = 22)

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