问题
I run R on Windows, and have a csv file on the Desktop. I load it as follows,
x<-read.csv(\"C:\\Users\\surfcat\\Desktop\\2006_dissimilarity.csv\",header=TRUE)
but the R gives the following error message
Error: \'\\U\' used without hex digits in character string starting \"C:\\U\"
So what\'s the correct way to load this file. I am using Vista
回答1:
replace all the \
with \\
.
it's trying to escape the next character in this case the U
so to insert a \
you need to insert an escaped \
which is \\
回答2:
Please do not mark this response as correct as smitec has already answered correctly. I'm including a convenience function I keep in my .First library that makes converting a windows path to the format that works in R (the methods described by Sacha Epskamp). Simply copy the path to your clipboard (ctrl + c) and then run the function as pathPrep()
. No need for an argument. The path is printed to your console correctly and written to your clipboard for easy pasting to a script. Hope this is helpful.
pathPrep <- function(path = "clipboard") {
y <- if (path == "clipboard") {
readClipboard()
} else {
cat("Please enter the path:\n\n")
readline()
}
x <- chartr("\\", "/", y)
writeClipboard(x)
return(x)
}
回答3:
Solution
Try this: x <- read.csv("C:/Users/surfcat/Desktop/2006_dissimilarity.csv", header=TRUE)
Explanation
R is not able to understand normal windows paths correctly because the "\"
has special meaning - it is used as escape character to give following characters special meaning (\n
for newline, \t
for tab, \r
for carriage return, ..., have a look here ).
Because R does not know the sequence \U
it complains. Just replace the "\"
with "/"
or use an additional "\"
to escape the "\"
from its special meaning and everything works smooth.
Alternative
On windows, I think the best thing to do to improve your workflow with windows specific paths in R is to use e.g. AutoHotkey which allows for custom hotkeys:
- define a Hotkey, e.g. Cntr-Shift-V
- assigns it an procedure that replaces backslashes within your Clipboard with slaches ...
- when ever you want to copy paste a path into R you can use Cntr-Shift-V instead of Cntr-V
- Et-voila
AutoHotkey Code Snippet (link to homepage)
^+v::
StringReplace, clipboard, clipboard, \, /, All
SendInput, %clipboard%
回答4:
My Solution is to define an RStudio snippet as follows:
snippet pp
"`r gsub("\\\\", "\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\", readClipboard())`"
This snippet converts backslashes \
into double backslashes \\
. The following version will work if you prefer to convert backslahes to forward slashes /
.
snippet pp
"`r gsub("\\\\", "/", readClipboard())`"
Once your preferred snippet is defined, paste a path from the clipboard by typing p-p-TAB-ENTER (that is pp and then the tab key and then enter) and the path will be magically inserted with R friendly delimiters.
回答5:
Replace back slashes \ with forward slashes / when running windows machine
回答6:
Replacing backslash with forward slash worked for me on Windows.
回答7:
The best way to deal with this in case of txt file which contains data for text mining (speech, newsletter, etc.) is to replace "\" with "/".
Example:
file<-Corpus(DirSource("C:/Users/PRATEEK/Desktop/training tool/Text Analytics/text_file_main"))
回答8:
I know this is really old, but if you are copying and pasting anyway, you can just use:
read.csv(readClipboard())
readClipboard() escapes the back-slashes for you. Just remember to make sure the ".csv" is included in your copy, perhaps with this:
read.csv(paste0(readClipboard(),'.csv'))
And if you really want to minimize your typing you can use some functions:
setWD <- function(){
setwd(readClipboard())
}
readCSV <- function(){
return(readr::read_csv(paste0(readClipboard(),'.csv')))
}
#copy directory path
setWD()
#copy file name
df <- readCSV()
回答9:
I think that R is reading the '\' in the string as an escape character. For example \n creates a new line within a string, \t creates a new tab within the string.
'\' will work because R will recognize this as a normal backslash.
回答10:
readClipboard()
works directly too. Copy the path into your clipboard
C:\Users\surfcat\Desktop\2006_dissimilarity.csv
Then
readClipboard()
appears as
[1] "C:\\Users\\surfcat\\Desktop\\2006_dissimilarity.csv"
回答11:
A simple way is to use python. in python terminal type
r"C:\Users\surfcat\Desktop\2006_dissimilarity.csv" and you'll get back 'C:\Users\surfcat\Desktop\2006_dissimilarity.csv'
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8425409/file-path-issues-in-r-using-windows-hex-digits-in-character-string-error