On May 14, 2012, at 6:35 AM, Berend Hasselman wrote:
On 14-05-2012, at 12:07, Wincent wrote:
Emm, my bad.
I meant str <- "abc\d".
Any ideas?
gsub("", "", str)
#1: One cannot execute: str <- "abc\d" , at least on my machine,
since that throws an error because "\d" is an "unrecogn
On 14-05-2012, at 12:07, Wincent wrote:
> Emm, my bad.
> I meant str <- "abc\d".
> Any ideas?
gsub("", "", str)
Berend
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Emm, my bad.
I meant str <- "abc\d".
Any ideas?
On 14 May 2012 18:02, Baoqiang wrote:
> This works on Mac:
>
> str <- "abc/d"
> gsub("/", "", str)
>
> Return:
> "abcd"
>
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On May 14, 2012, at 4:28 AM, Wincent wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the suggestion. The file name in my ca
This works on Mac:
str <- "abc/d"
gsub("/", "", str)
Return:
"abcd"
Sent from my iPhone
On May 14, 2012, at 4:28 AM, Wincent wrote:
> Thanks for the suggestion. The file name in my case is Chinese, which
> makes the regular expression less useful.
>
> Anyway, I would like to pose a followup
gt; location,
>>> as in your example.
>>>
>>> steve
>>>
>>> -Original Message-
>>> From: r-help-boun...@r-project.org [mailto:r-help-boun...@r-project.org] On
>>> Behalf Of Wincent
>>> Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2012 11:
Thanks for the suggestion. The file name in my case is Chinese, which
makes the regular expression less useful.
Anyway, I would like to pose a followup question.
I have a character string of "ABC\D", and want to strip away the "\"
and want a returned character of "ABCD". How can I do it with gsub(
-boun...@r-project.org] On
>> Behalf Of Wincent
>> Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2012 11:15 AM
>> To: Tal Galili
>> Cc: r help
>> Subject: Re: [R] file path
>>
>> Hmm, I don't think it gives what I want.
>>
>> For example, I assign a file name to f,
e to a specific location,
> as in your example.
>
> steve
>
> -Original Message-
> From: r-help-boun...@r-project.org [mailto:r-help-boun...@r-project.org] On
> Behalf Of Wincent
> Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2012 11:15 AM
> To: Tal Galili
> Cc: r help
> Subject: R
Of Wincent
Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2012 11:15 AM
To: Tal Galili
Cc: r help
Subject: Re: [R] file path
Hmm, I don't think it gives what I want.
For example, I assign a file name to f,
> f <- "a?b.txt"
> file.path("e:",f)
[1] "e:/a?b.txt"
The resultant
On 09.05.2012 17:14, Wincent wrote:
Hmm, I don't think it gives what I want.
For example, I assign a file name to f,
f<- "a?b.txt"
file.path("e:",f)
[1] "e:/a?b.txt"
The resultant character is not accepted as a file name by Windows OS.
Not on Linux if you write to a smb file system, and
Hmm, I don't think it gives what I want.
For example, I assign a file name to f,
> f <- "a?b.txt"
> file.path("e:",f)
[1] "e:/a?b.txt"
The resultant character is not accepted as a file name by Windows OS.
On 9 May 2012 20:32, Tal Galili wrote:
> Hi Wincent,
> Have a look at:
> ?file.path
>
>
>
On 09/05/2012 4:03 AM, Wincent wrote:
Dear all, is there any function to assert whether a file path is
legitimate, and to convert any potential file path to a legitimate
file path?
I automate a batch of files and write them to plain text files with
cat(). The file argument of cat() is generated
Hi Wincent,
Have a look at:
?file.path
Contact
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Dear all, is there any function to assert whether a file path is
legitimate, and to convert any potential file path to a legitimate
file path?
I automate a batch of files and write them to plain text files with
cat(). The file argument of cat() is generated automatically which may
contain characte
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