The function reads a DBF file into a data frame, converting character fields to factors, and trying to respect NULL fields.
The DBF format is documented but not much adhered to. There is is no guarantee this will read all DBF files.
read.dbf(file, as.is = FALSE)
A data frame of data from the DBF file; note that the field names are
adjusted to use in R using make.names(unique=TRUE)
.
There is an attribute "data_type"
giving the single-character
dBase types for each field.
name of input file
should character vectors not be converted to factors?
Nicholas Lewin-Koh and Roger Bivand; shapelib by Frank Warmerdam
DBF is the extension used for files written for the ‘XBASE’ family of database languages, ‘covering the dBase, Clipper, FoxPro, and their Windows equivalents Visual dBase, Visual Objects, and Visual FoxPro, plus some older products’ (https://www.clicketyclick.dk/databases/xbase/format/). Most of these follow the file structure used by Ashton-Tate's dBase II, III or 4 (later owned by Borland).
read.dbf
is based on C code from
http://shapelib.maptools.org/ which implements the
‘XBASE’ specification. It can convert fields of type
"L"
(logical), "N"
and "F"
(numeric and float)
and "D"
(dates): all other field types are read as-is as
character vectors. A numeric field is read as an R integer vector if
it is encoded to have no decimals, otherwise as a numeric vector. However,
if the numbers are too large to fit into an integer vector, it is
changed to numeric. Note that is possible to read integers that cannot be
represented exactly even as doubles: this sometimes occurs if IDs are
incorrectly coded as numeric.
http://shapelib.maptools.org/.
write.dbf
x <- read.dbf(system.file("files/sids.dbf", package="foreign")[1])
str(x)
summary(x)
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