[R] how to separate string from numbers in a large txt file
Jeff Newmiller
jdnewm|| @end|ng |rom dcn@d@v|@@c@@u@
Fri May 17 22:03:19 CEST 2019
If byte order mark is the issue then you can specify the file encoding as "UTF-8-BOM" and it won't show up in your data any more.
On May 17, 2019 12:12:17 PM PDT, William Dunlap via R-help <r-help using r-project.org> wrote:
>The pattern I gave worked for the lines that you originally showed from
>the
>data file ('a'), before you put commas into them. If the name is
>either of
>the form "<name>" or "***" then the "(<[^>]*>)" needs to be changed so
>something like "(<[^>]*>|[*]{3})".
>
>The " " at the start of the imported data may come from the byte
>order
>mark that Windows apps like to put at the front of a text file in UTF-8
>or
>UTF-16 format.
>
>Bill Dunlap
>TIBCO Software
>wdunlap tibco.com
>
>
>On Fri, May 17, 2019 at 11:53 AM Michael Boulineau <
>michael.p.boulineau using gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> This seemed to work:
>>
>> > a <- readLines ("hangouts-conversation-6.csv.txt")
>> > b <- sub("^(.{10}) (.{8}) (<.+>) (.+$)", "\\1,\\2,\\3,\\4", a)
>> > b [1:84]
>>
>> And the first 85 lines looks like this:
>>
>> [83] "2016-06-28 21:02:28 *** Jane Doe started a video chat"
>> [84] "2016-06-28 21:12:43 *** John Doe ended a video chat"
>>
>> Then they transition to the commas:
>>
>> > b [84:100]
>> [1] "2016-06-28 21:12:43 *** John Doe ended a video chat"
>> [2] "2016-07-01,02:50:35,<John Doe>,hey"
>> [3] "2016-07-01,02:51:26,<John Doe>,waiting for plane to Edinburgh"
>> [4] "2016-07-01,02:51:45,<John Doe>,thinking about my boo"
>>
>> Even the strange bit on line 6347 was caught by this:
>>
>> > b [6346:6348]
>> [1] "2016-10-21,10:56:29,<John Doe>,John_Doe"
>> [2] "2016-10-21,10:56:37,<John Doe>,Admit#8242"
>> [3] "2016-10-21,11:00:13,<Jane Doe>,Okay so you have a discussion"
>>
>> Perhaps most awesomely, the code catches spaces that are interposed
>> into the comment itself:
>>
>> > b [4]
>> [1] "2016-01-27,09:15:20,<Jane Doe>,Hey "
>> > b [85]
>> [1] "2016-07-01,02:50:35,<John Doe>,hey"
>>
>> Notice whether there is a space after the "hey" or not.
>>
>> These are the first two lines:
>>
>> [1] "2016-01-27 09:14:40 *** Jane Doe started a video chat"
>> [2] "2016-01-27,09:15:20,<Jane
>> Doe>,
>>
>https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-_WQF5kRcnpk/Vqj7J4aK1jI/AAAAAAAAAVA/GVqutPqbSuo/s0/be8ded30-87a6-4e80-bdfa-83ed51591dbf
>> "
>>
>> So, who knows what happened with the  at the beginning of [1]
>> directly above. But notice how there are no commas in [1] but there
>> appear in [2]. I don't see why really long ones like [2] directly
>> above would be a problem, were they to be translated into a csv or
>> data frame column.
>>
>> Now, with the commas in there, couldn't we write this into a csv or a
>> data.frame? Some of this data will end up being garbage, I imagine.
>> Like in [2] directly above. Or with [83] and [84] at the top of this
>> discussion post/email. Embarrassingly, I've been trying to convert
>> this into a data.frame or csv but I can't manage to. I've been using
>> the write.csv function, but I don't think I've been getting the
>> arguments correct.
>>
>> At the end of the day, I would like a data.frame and/or csv with the
>> following four columns: date, time, person, comment.
>>
>> I tried this, too:
>>
>> > c <- strcapture("^([[:digit:]]{4}-[[:digit:]]{2}-[[:digit:]]{2}
>> + [[:digit:]]{2}:[[:digit:]]{2}:[[:digit:]]{2}) +(<[^>]*>) *(.*$)",
>> + a, proto=data.frame(stringsAsFactors=FALSE,
>When="",
>> Who="",
>> + What=""))
>>
>> But all I got was this:
>>
>> > c [1:100, ]
>> When Who What
>> 1 <NA> <NA> <NA>
>> 2 <NA> <NA> <NA>
>> 3 <NA> <NA> <NA>
>> 4 <NA> <NA> <NA>
>> 5 <NA> <NA> <NA>
>> 6 <NA> <NA> <NA>
>>
>> It seems to have caught nothing.
>>
>> > unique (c)
>> When Who What
>> 1 <NA> <NA> <NA>
>>
>> But I like that it converted into columns. That's a really great
>> format. With a little tweaking, it'd be a great code for this data
>> set.
>>
>> Michael
>>
>> On Fri, May 17, 2019 at 8:20 AM William Dunlap via R-help
>> <r-help using r-project.org> wrote:
>> >
>> > Consider using readLines() and strcapture() for reading such a
>file.
>> E.g.,
>> > suppose readLines(files) produced a character vector like
>> >
>> > x <- c("2016-10-21 10:35:36 <Jane Doe> What's your login",
>> > "2016-10-21 10:56:29 <John Doe> John_Doe",
>> > "2016-10-21 10:56:37 <John Doe> Admit#8242",
>> > "October 23, 1819 12:34 <Jane Eyre> I am not an angel")
>> >
>> > Then you can make a data.frame with columns When, Who, and What by
>> > supplying a pattern containing three parenthesized capture
>expressions:
>> > > z <- strcapture("^([[:digit:]]{4}-[[:digit:]]{2}-[[:digit:]]{2}
>> > [[:digit:]]{2}:[[:digit:]]{2}:[[:digit:]]{2}) +(<[^>]*>) *(.*$)",
>> > x, proto=data.frame(stringsAsFactors=FALSE, When="",
>Who="",
>> > What=""))
>> > > str(z)
>> > 'data.frame': 4 obs. of 3 variables:
>> > $ When: chr "2016-10-21 10:35:36" "2016-10-21 10:56:29"
>"2016-10-21
>> > 10:56:37" NA
>> > $ Who : chr "<Jane Doe>" "<John Doe>" "<John Doe>" NA
>> > $ What: chr "What's your login" "John_Doe" "Admit#8242" NA
>> >
>> > Lines that don't match the pattern result in NA's - you might make
>a
>> second
>> > pass over the corresponding elements of x with a new pattern.
>> >
>> > You can convert the When column from character to time with
>as.POSIXct().
>> >
>> > Bill Dunlap
>> > TIBCO Software
>> > wdunlap tibco.com
>> >
>> >
>> > On Thu, May 16, 2019 at 8:30 PM David Winsemius
><dwinsemius using comcast.net>
>> > wrote:
>> >
>> > >
>> > > On 5/16/19 3:53 PM, Michael Boulineau wrote:
>> > > > OK. So, I named the object test and then checked the 6347th
>item
>> > > >
>> > > >> test <- readLines ("hangouts-conversation.txt)
>> > > >> test [6347]
>> > > > [1] "2016-10-21 10:56:37 <John Doe> Admit#8242"
>> > > >
>> > > > Perhaps where it was getting screwed up is, since the end of
>this is
>> a
>> > > > number (8242), then, given that there's no space between the
>number
>> > > > and what ought to be the next row, R didn't know where to draw
>the
>> > > > line. Sure enough, it looks like this when I go to the original
>file
>> > > > and control f "#8242"
>> > > >
>> > > > 2016-10-21 10:35:36 <Jane Doe> What's your login
>> > > > 2016-10-21 10:56:29 <John Doe> John_Doe
>> > > > 2016-10-21 10:56:37 <John Doe> Admit#8242
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > An octothorpe is an end of line signifier and is interpreted as
>> allowing
>> > > comments. You can prevent that interpretation with suitable
>choice of
>> > > parameters to `read.table` or `read.csv`. I don't understand why
>that
>> > > should cause anu error or a failure to match that pattern.
>> > >
>> > > > 2016-10-21 11:00:13 <Jane Doe> Okay so you have a discussion
>> > > >
>> > > > Again, it doesn't look like that in the file. Gmail
>automatically
>> > > > formats it like that when I paste it in. More to the point, it
>looks
>> > > > like
>> > > >
>> > > > 2016-10-21 10:35:36 <Jane Doe> What's your login2016-10-21
>10:56:29
>> > > > <John Doe> John_Doe2016-10-21 10:56:37 <John Doe>
>> Admit#82422016-10-21
>> > > > 11:00:13 <Jane Doe> Okay so you have a discussion
>> > > >
>> > > > Notice Admit#82422016. So there's that.
>> > > >
>> > > > Then I built object test2.
>> > > >
>> > > > test2 <- sub("^(.{10}) (.{8}) (<.+>) (.+$)", "//1,//2,//3,//4",
>test)
>> > > >
>> > > > This worked for 84 lines, then this happened.
>> > >
>> > > It may have done something but as you later discovered my first
>code
>> for
>> > > the pattern was incorrect. I had tested it (and pasted in the
>results
>> of
>> > > the test) . The way to refer to a capture class is with
>back-slashes
>> > > before the numbers, not forward-slashes. Try this:
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > > newvec <- sub("^(.{10}) (.{8}) (<.+>) (.+$)",
>"\\1,\\2,\\3,\\4",
>> chrvec)
>> > > > newvec
>> > > [1] "2016-07-01,02:50:35,<john>,hey"
>> > > [2] "2016-07-01,02:51:26,<jane>,waiting for plane to Edinburgh"
>> > > [3] "2016-07-01,02:51:45,<john>,thinking about my boo"
>> > > [4] "2016-07-01,02:52:07,<jane>,nothing crappy has happened,
>not
>> really"
>> > > [5] "2016-07-01,02:52:20,<john>,plane went by pretty fast,
>didn't
>> sleep"
>> > > [6] "2016-07-01,02:54:08,<jane>,no idea what time it is or
>where I am
>> > > really"
>> > > [7] "2016-07-01,02:54:17,<john>,just know it's london"
>> > > [8] "2016-07-01,02:56:44,<jane>,you are probably asleep"
>> > > [9] "2016-07-01,02:58:45,<jane>,I hope fish was fishy in a good
>eay"
>> > > [10] "2016-07-01 02:58:56 <jone>"
>> > > [11] "2016-07-01 02:59:34 <jane>"
>> > > [12] "2016-07-01,03:02:48,<john>,British security is a little
>more
>> > > rigorous..."
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > I made note of the fact that the 10th and 11th lines had no
>commas.
>> > >
>> > > >
>> > > >> test2 [84]
>> > > > [1] "2016-06-28 21:12:43 *** John Doe ended a video chat"
>> > >
>> > > That line didn't have any "<" so wasn't matched.
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > You could remove all none matching lines for pattern of
>> > >
>> > > dates<space>times<space>"<"<name>">"<space><anything>
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > with:
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > chrvec <- chrvec[ grepl("^.{10} .{8} <.+> .+$)", chrvec)]
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > Do read:
>> > >
>> > > ?read.csv
>> > >
>> > > ?regex
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > --
>> > >
>> > > David
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > >> test2 [85]
>> > > > [1] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > >> test [85]
>> > > > [1] "2016-07-01 02:50:35 <John Doe> hey"
>> > > >
>> > > > Notice how I toggled back and forth between test and test2
>there. So,
>> > > > whatever happened with the regex, it happened in the switch
>from 84
>> to
>> > > > 85, I guess. It went on like
>> > > >
>> > > > [990] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > > [991] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > > [992] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > > [993] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > > [994] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > > [995] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > > [996] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > > [997] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > > [998] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > > [999] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > > [1000] "//1,//2,//3,//4"
>> > > >
>> > > > up until line 1000, then I reached max.print.
>> > >
>> > > > Michael
>> > > >
>> > > > On Thu, May 16, 2019 at 1:05 PM David Winsemius <
>> dwinsemius using comcast.net>
>> > > wrote:
>> > > >>
>> > > >> On 5/16/19 12:30 PM, Michael Boulineau wrote:
>> > > >>> Thanks for this tip on etiquette, David. I will be sure and
>not do
>> > > that again.
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> I tried the read.fwf from the foreign package, with a code
>like
>> this:
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> d <- read.fwf("hangouts-conversation.txt",
>> > > >>> widths= c(10,10,20,40),
>> > > >>>
>col.names=c("date","time","person","comment"),
>> > > >>> strip.white=TRUE)
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> But it threw this error:
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> Error in scan(file = file, what = what, sep = sep, quote =
>quote,
>> dec
>> > > = dec, :
>> > > >>> line 6347 did not have 4 elements
>> > > >>
>> > > >> So what does line 6347 look like? (Use `readLines` and print
>it
>> out.)
>> > > >>
>> > > >>> Interestingly, though, the error only happened when I
>increased the
>> > > >>> width size. But I had to increase the size, or else I
>couldn't
>> "see"
>> > > >>> anything. The comment was so small that nothing was being
>> captured by
>> > > >>> the size of the column. so to speak.
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> It seems like what's throwing me is that there's no comma
>that
>> > > >>> demarcates the end of the text proper. For example:
>> > > >> Not sure why you thought there should be a comma. Lines
>usually end
>> > > >> with <cr> and or a <lf>.
>> > > >>
>> > > >>
>> > > >> Once you have the raw text in a character vector from
>`readLines`
>> named,
>> > > >> say, 'chrvec', then you could selectively substitute commas
>for
>> spaces
>> > > >> with regex. (Now that you no longer desire to remove the dates
>and
>> > > times.)
>> > > >>
>> > > >> sub("^(.{10}) (.{8}) (<.+>) (.+$)", "//1,//2,//3,//4", chrvec)
>> > > >>
>> > > >> This will not do any replacements when the pattern is not
>matched.
>> See
>> > > >> this test:
>> > > >>
>> > > >>
>> > > >> > newvec <- sub("^(.{10}) (.{8}) (<.+>) (.+$)",
>"\\1,\\2,\\3,\\4",
>> > > chrvec)
>> > > >> > newvec
>> > > >> [1] "2016-07-01,02:50:35,<john>,hey"
>> > > >> [2] "2016-07-01,02:51:26,<jane>,waiting for plane to
>Edinburgh"
>> > > >> [3] "2016-07-01,02:51:45,<john>,thinking about my boo"
>> > > >> [4] "2016-07-01,02:52:07,<jane>,nothing crappy has
>happened, not
>> > > really"
>> > > >> [5] "2016-07-01,02:52:20,<john>,plane went by pretty fast,
>didn't
>> > > sleep"
>> > > >> [6] "2016-07-01,02:54:08,<jane>,no idea what time it is or
>where
>> I am
>> > > >> really"
>> > > >> [7] "2016-07-01,02:54:17,<john>,just know it's london"
>> > > >> [8] "2016-07-01,02:56:44,<jane>,you are probably asleep"
>> > > >> [9] "2016-07-01,02:58:45,<jane>,I hope fish was fishy in a
>good
>> eay"
>> > > >> [10] "2016-07-01 02:58:56 <jone>"
>> > > >> [11] "2016-07-01 02:59:34 <jane>"
>> > > >> [12] "2016-07-01,03:02:48,<john>,British security is a little
>more
>> > > >> rigorous..."
>> > > >>
>> > > >>
>> > > >> You should probably remove the "empty comment" lines.
>> > > >>
>> > > >>
>> > > >> --
>> > > >>
>> > > >> David.
>> > > >>
>> > > >>> 2016-07-01 15:34:30 <John Doe> Lame. We were in a
>> starbucks2016-07-01
>> > > >>> 15:35:02 <Jane Doe> Hmm that's interesting2016-07-01 15:35:09
><Jane
>> > > >>> Doe> You must want coffees2016-07-01 15:35:25 <John Doe>
>There was
>> > > >>> lots of Starbucks in my day2016-07-01 15:35:47
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> It was interesting, too, when I pasted the text into the
>email, it
>> > > >>> self-formatted into the way I wanted it to look. I had to
>manually
>> > > >>> make it look like it does above, since that's the way that it
>> looks in
>> > > >>> the txt file. I wonder if it's being organized by XML or
>something.
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> Anyways, There's always a space between the two sideways
>carrots,
>> just
>> > > >>> like there is right now: <John Doe> See. Space. And there's
>always
>> a
>> > > >>> space between the data and time. Like this. 2016-07-01
>15:34:30
>> See.
>> > > >>> Space. But there's never a space between the end of the
>comment and
>> > > >>> the next date. Like this: We were in a starbucks2016-07-01
>15:35:02
>> > > >>> See. starbucks and 2016 are smooshed together.
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> This code is also on the table right now too.
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> a <- read.table("E:/working
>> > > >>> directory/-189/hangouts-conversation2.txt", quote="\"",
>> > > >>> comment.char="", fill=TRUE)
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>>
>> > >
>>
>h<-cbind(hangouts.conversation2[,1:2],hangouts.conversation2[,3:5],hangouts.conversation2[,6:9])
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> aa<-gsub("[^[:digit:]]","",h)
>> > > >>> my.data.num <- as.numeric(str_extract(h, "[0-9]+"))
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> Those last lines are a work in progress. I wish I could
>import a
>> > > >>> picture of what it looks like when it's translated into a
>data
>> frame.
>> > > >>> The fill=TRUE helped to get the data in table that kind of
>sort of
>> > > >>> works, but the comments keep bleeding into the data and time
>> column.
>> > > >>> It's like
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> 2016-07-01 15:59:17 <Jane Doe> Seriously I've never been
>> > > >>> over there
>> > > >>> 2016-07-01 15:59:27 <Jane Doe> It confuses me :(
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> And then, maybe, the "seriously" will be in a column all to
>> itself, as
>> > > >>> will be the "I've'"and the "never" etc.
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> I will use a regular expression if I have to, but it would be
>nice
>> to
>> > > >>> keep the dates and times on there. Originally, I thought they
>were
>> > > >>> meaningless, but I've since changed my mind on that count.
>The
>> time of
>> > > >>> day isn't so important. But, especially since, say, Gmail
>itself
>> knows
>> > > >>> how to quickly recognize what it is, I know it can be done. I
>know
>> > > >>> this data has structure to it.
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> Michael
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>>
>> > > >>> On Wed, May 15, 2019 at 8:47 PM David Winsemius <
>> > > dwinsemius using comcast.net> wrote:
>> > > >>>> On 5/15/19 4:07 PM, Michael Boulineau wrote:
>> > > >>>>> I have a wild and crazy text file, the head of which looks
>like
>> this:
>> > > >>>>>
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:50:35 <john> hey
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:51:26 <jane> waiting for plane to Edinburgh
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:51:45 <john> thinking about my boo
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:52:07 <jane> nothing crappy has happened, not
>> really
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:52:20 <john> plane went by pretty fast,
>didn't
>> sleep
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:54:08 <jane> no idea what time it is or where
>I am
>> > > really
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:54:17 <john> just know it's london
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:56:44 <jane> you are probably asleep
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:58:45 <jane> I hope fish was fishy in a good
>eay
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:58:56 <jone>
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 02:59:34 <jane>
>> > > >>>>> 2016-07-01 03:02:48 <john> British security is a little
>more
>> > > rigorous...
>> > > >>>> Looks entirely not-"crazy". Typical log file format.
>> > > >>>>
>> > > >>>> Two possibilities: 1) Use `read.fwf` from pkg foreign; 2)
>Use
>> regex
>> > > >>>> (i.e. the sub-function) to strip everything up to the "<".
>Read
>> > > >>>> `?regex`. Since that's not a metacharacters you could use a
>> pattern
>> > > >>>> ".+<" and replace with "".
>> > > >>>>
>> > > >>>> And do read the Posting Guide. Cross-posting to
>StackOverflow and
>> > > Rhelp,
>> > > >>>> at least within hours of each, is considered poor manners.
>> > > >>>>
>> > > >>>>
>> > > >>>> --
>> > > >>>>
>> > > >>>> David.
>> > > >>>>
>> > > >>>>> It goes on for a while. It's a big file. But I feel like
>it's
>> going
>> > > to
>> > > >>>>> be difficult to annotate with the coreNLP library or
>package. I'm
>> > > >>>>> doing natural language processing. In other words, I'm
>curious
>> as to
>> > > >>>>> how I would shave off the dates, that is, to make it look
>like:
>> > > >>>>>
>> > > >>>>> <john> hey
>> > > >>>>> <jane> waiting for plane to Edinburgh
>> > > >>>>> <john> thinking about my boo
>> > > >>>>> <jane> nothing crappy has happened, not really
>> > > >>>>> <john> plane went by pretty fast, didn't sleep
>> > > >>>>> <jane> no idea what time it is or where I am really
>> > > >>>>> <john> just know it's london
>> > > >>>>> <jane> you are probably asleep
>> > > >>>>> <jane> I hope fish was fishy in a good eay
>> > > >>>>> <jone>
>> > > >>>>> <jane>
>> > > >>>>> <john> British security is a little more rigorous...
>> > > >>>>>
>> > > >>>>> To be clear, then, I'm trying to clean a large text file by
>> writing a
>> > > >>>>> regular expression? such that I create a new object with no
>> numbers
>> > > or
>> > > >>>>> dates.
>> > > >>>>>
>> > > >>>>> Michael
>> > > >>>>>
>> > > >>>>> ______________________________________________
>> > > >>>>> R-help using r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and
>more,
>> see
>> > > >>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
>> > > >>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide
>> > > http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
>> > > >>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained,
>reproducible
>> code.
>> > > >>> ______________________________________________
>> > > >>> R-help using r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more,
>see
>> > > >>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
>> > > >>> PLEASE do read the posting guide
>> > > http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
>> > > >>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible
>code.
>> > > >> ______________________________________________
>> > > >> R-help using r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more,
>see
>> > > >> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
>> > > >> PLEASE do read the posting guide
>> > > http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
>> > > >> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible
>code.
>> > > > ______________________________________________
>> > > > R-help using r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more,
>see
>> > > > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
>> > > > PLEASE do read the posting guide
>> > > http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
>> > > > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible
>code.
>> > >
>> > > ______________________________________________
>> > > R-help using r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see
>> > > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
>> > > PLEASE do read the posting guide
>> > > http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
>> > > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible
>code.
>> > >
>> >
>> > [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>> >
>> > ______________________________________________
>> > R-help using r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see
>> > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
>> > PLEASE do read the posting guide
>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
>> > and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
>>
>> ______________________________________________
>> R-help using r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see
>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
>> PLEASE do read the posting guide
>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
>>
>
> [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>
>______________________________________________
>R-help using r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see
>https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
>PLEASE do read the posting guide
>http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
>and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
--
Sent from my phone. Please excuse my brevity.
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