For certain non-rectangular data formats, it can be useful to parse the data into a melted format where each row represents a single token.
melt_delim_chunked(
file,
callback,
chunk_size = 10000,
delim,
quote = "\"",
escape_backslash = FALSE,
escape_double = TRUE,
locale = default_locale(),
na = c("", "NA"),
quoted_na = TRUE,
comment = "",
trim_ws = FALSE,
skip = 0,
progress = show_progress(),
skip_empty_rows = FALSE
)melt_csv_chunked(
file,
callback,
chunk_size = 10000,
locale = default_locale(),
na = c("", "NA"),
quoted_na = TRUE,
quote = "\"",
comment = "",
trim_ws = TRUE,
skip = 0,
progress = show_progress(),
skip_empty_rows = FALSE
)
melt_csv2_chunked(
file,
callback,
chunk_size = 10000,
locale = default_locale(),
na = c("", "NA"),
quoted_na = TRUE,
quote = "\"",
comment = "",
trim_ws = TRUE,
skip = 0,
progress = show_progress(),
skip_empty_rows = FALSE
)
melt_tsv_chunked(
file,
callback,
chunk_size = 10000,
locale = default_locale(),
na = c("", "NA"),
quoted_na = TRUE,
quote = "\"",
comment = "",
trim_ws = TRUE,
skip = 0,
progress = show_progress(),
skip_empty_rows = FALSE
)
Either a path to a file, a connection, or literal data (either a single string or a raw vector).
Files ending in .gz
, .bz2
, .xz
, or .zip
will
be automatically uncompressed. Files starting with http://
,
https://
, ftp://
, or ftps://
will be automatically
downloaded. Remote gz files can also be automatically downloaded and
decompressed.
Literal data is most useful for examples and tests. To be recognised as
literal data, the input must be either wrapped with I()
, be a string
containing at least one new line, or be a vector containing at least one
string with a new line.
Using a value of clipboard()
will read from the system clipboard.
A callback function to call on each chunk
The number of rows to include in each chunk
Single character used to separate fields within a record.
Single character used to quote strings.
Does the file use backslashes to escape special
characters? This is more general than escape_double
as backslashes
can be used to escape the delimiter character, the quote character, or
to add special characters like \\n
.
Does the file escape quotes by doubling them?
i.e. If this option is TRUE
, the value """"
represents
a single quote, \"
.
The locale controls defaults that vary from place to place.
The default locale is US-centric (like R), but you can use
locale()
to create your own locale that controls things like
the default time zone, encoding, decimal mark, big mark, and day/month
names.
Character vector of strings to interpret as missing values. Set this
option to character()
to indicate no missing values.
Should missing values inside quotes be treated as missing values (the default) or strings. This parameter is soft deprecated as of readr 2.0.0.
A string used to identify comments. Any text after the comment characters will be silently ignored.
Should leading and trailing whitespace (ASCII spaces and tabs) be trimmed from each field before parsing it?
Number of lines to skip before reading data. If comment
is
supplied any commented lines are ignored after skipping.
Display a progress bar? By default it will only display
in an interactive session and not while knitting a document. The automatic
progress bar can be disabled by setting option readr.show_progress
to
FALSE
.
Should blank rows be ignored altogether? i.e. If this
option is TRUE
then blank rows will not be represented at all. If it is
FALSE
then they will be represented by NA
values in all the columns.
melt_delim_chunked()
and the specialisations melt_csv_chunked()
,
melt_csv2_chunked()
and melt_tsv_chunked()
read files by a chunk of rows
at a time, executing a given function on one chunk before reading the next.
Other chunked:
callback
,
read_delim_chunked()
,
read_lines_chunked()
# Cars with 3 gears
f <- function(x, pos) subset(x, data_type == "integer")
melt_csv_chunked(readr_example("mtcars.csv"), DataFrameCallback$new(f), chunk_size = 5)
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