I am running the following code...
#Create a list of all the files
file.list <- list.files(path=\"~/R/natural-language-processing/class-notes\", pattern=\".cs
Most likely you are trying to open files from the working directory instead of the directory in which you called list.files
. Instead try
D1 <- do.call("rbind",
lapply(paste0("~/R/natural-language-processing/class-notes/",
file.list),
read.csv, header = TRUE, stringsAsFactors = FALSE))
Alternatively, you can set the full.names
argument to TRUE
in list.files
to get complete paths:
file.list <- list.files(path="~/R/natural-language-processing/class-notes",
pattern=".csv", full.names = TRUE)
read.csv is looking for the file names in your working directory. By changing your working directory to "C:/Users/Bob/Documents/R/natural-language-processing/class-notes", your code should work just fine.
Code:
setwd("C:/Users/Bob/Documents/R/natural-language-processing/class-notes")
Then re-run your code.
In my case, the problem was that inside the directory with the *.csv files was also another directory. As soon as I moved the directory from the folder, the specific error disappeared.
I just spent a lot of time trying to understand what was wrong on my code too...
And it seems to be simple if you are using windows.
When you name your file "blabla.txt" then windows name it "blabla.txt.txt"... That's the same with .CSV files so windows create a file named "001.csv.csv" if you called it "001.csv"
So, when you create your .csv file, just rename it "001" and open it in R using read.table("/absolute/path/of/directory/with/required/001.csv")
It works for me.