Data import with the tidyverse :: Cheatsheet

One of the first steps of a project is to import outside data into R. Data is often stored in tabular formats, like csv files or spreadsheets.

library(readr)
library(readxl)
library(googlesheets4)

For importing other types of data try one of the following packages:

Read Tabular Data with readr

See ?read_delim.

read_*(
  file, 
  col_names = TRUE, col_types = NULL, col_select = NULL, 
  show_col_types = TRUE
  id = NULL, locale, 
  n_max = Inf, skip = 0, guess_max = min(1000, n_max), 
  na = c("", "NA")
)

Examples

  • Read files with any delimiter: read_delim(). If no delimiter is specified, it will automatically guess.

    • If the file you want to import is the following:

      A|B|C
      1|2|3
      4|5|NA
    • Read it with read_delim() and it will look like the following when imported:

      read_delim("file.txt", delim = "|", show_col_types = FALSE)
    • To make file.txt, run:

      write_file("A|B|C\n1|2|3\n4|5|NA", file = "file.txt")
  • Read a comma delimited file with period decimal marks: read_csv().

    • If the file you want to import is the following:

      A,B,C
      1,2,3
      4,5,NA
    • Read it with read_csv() and it will look like the following when imported:

      read_csv("file.csv", show_col_types = FALSE)
    • To make file.csv, run:

      write_file("A,B,C\n1,2,3\n4,5,NA", file = "file.csv")
  • Read semicolon delimited files with comma decimal marks: read_csv2().

    • If the file you want to import is the following:

      A;B;C
      1,5;2;3
      4,5;5;NA
    • Read it with read_csv2() and it will look like the following when imported:

      read_csv2("file2.csv", show_col_types = FALSE)
    • To make file2.csv, run:

      write_file("A;B;C\n1,5;2;3\n4,5;5;NA", file = "file2.csv")
  • Read a tab delimited file: read_tsv() or read_table().

    Read a fixed width file: read_fwf("file.tsv", fwf_widths(c(2, 2, NA))).

    • If the file you want to import is the following:

      A B C
      1 2 3
      4 5 NA
    • Read it with read_tsv() and it will look like the following when imported:

      read_tsv("file.tsv", show_col_types = FALSE)
    • To make tsv, run:

      write_file("A\tB\tC\n1\t2\t3\n4\t5\tNA\n", file = "file.tsv")

Useful read arguments

Suppose you have the following CSV files that you want to read in, called file.csv:

file.csv

A,B,C
1,2,3
4,5,NA

file3.csv

A,B,C
7,8,9
NA,11,12

To make these files, run:

write_file("A,B,C\n1,2,3\n4,5,NA", file = "file.csv")
write_file("A,B,C\n7,8,9\nNA,11,12", file = "file3.csv")
  • No header: col_names = FALSE

    read_csv("file.csv", col_names = FALSE)
  • Provide header: col_names = c("x", "y", "z")

    read_csv("file.csv", col_names = c("x", "y", "z"))
  • Skip lines:

    read_csv("file.csv", skip = 1)
  • Read a subset of lines:

    read_csv("file.csv", n_max = 1)
  • Read values as missing:

    read_csv("file.csv", na = c("1"))
  • Specify decimal marks:

    read_delim("file2.csv", locale = locale(decimal_mark = ","))
  • Read multiple files into a single table:

    read_csv(c("file.csv", "file3.csv"), id = "origin_file")

Save data with readr

write_*(
  x, file, 
  na = "NA", 
  append, col_names, quote, escape, eol, num_threads, progress
)
  • Write files with any delimiter: write_delim(x, file, delim = " ")
  • Write a comma delimited file: write_csv(x, file)
  • Write a semicolon delimited file: write_csv2(x, file)
  • Write a tab delimited file: write_tsv(x, file)

Column specification with readr

Column specifications define what data type each column of a file will be imported as. By default readr will generate a column spec when a file is read and output a summary.

spec(df): Extract the full column specification for the given imported data frame.

spec(df)
# cols(
#   age = col_integer(),   # age is an integer
#   edu = col_character(), # edu is a character
#   earn = col_double()    # earn is a double (numeric)
# )

Column types

Each column type has a function and corresponding string abbreviation.

  • col_logical() - "l"
  • col_integer() - "i"
  • col_double() - "d"
  • col_number() - "n"
  • col_character() - "c"
  • col_factor(levels, ordered = FALSE) - "f"
  • col_datetime(format = "") - "T"
  • col_date(format = "") - "D"
  • col_time(format = "") - "t"
  • col_skip() - "-", "_"
  • col_guess() - "?"

Useful column arguments

  • Hide col spec message:

    read_*(file, show_col_types = FALSE)
  • Select columns to import: Use names, position, or selection helpers.

    read_*(file, col_select = c(age, earn))
  • Guess column types: To guess a column type, read_ *() looks at the first 1000 rows of data. Increase with guess_max.

    read_*(file, guess_max = Inf)

Define column specification

  • Set a default type:

    read_csv(
      file, 
      col_type = list(.default = col_double())
    )
  • Use column type or string abbreviation:

    read_csv(
      file, 
      col_type = list(x = col_double(), y = "l", z = "_")
    )
  • Use a single string of abbreviations:

    # col types: skip, guess, integer, logical, character
    read_csv(
      file, 
      col_type = "_?ilc"
    )

Import spreadsheets with readxl

Read Excel files

Read a .xls or .xlsx file based on the file extension, e.g. read_excel("excel_file.xlsx"). See Useful read arguments for more read arguments. Also read_xls() and read_xlsx().

read_excel(path, sheet = NULL, range = NULL)
  • If the Google sheet you want to import is the following:

    Spreadsheet with 5 columns (A through E) and three rows. First row reads x1 through x5. Second and third row have some missing values.
    A B C D E
    x1 x2 x3 x4 x5
    x z 8
    y 7 9 10
  • It will look like the following when imported:

Read sheets

  • Specify which sheet to read by position or name: read_excel(path, sheet = NULL)

    • read_excel(path, sheet = 1)
    • read_excel(path, sheet = "s1")
  • Get a vector of sheet names: excel_sheets(path)

    excel_sheets("excel_file.xlsx")

  • To read multiple sheets:

    1. Get a vector of sheet names from the file path.

    2. Set the vector names to be the sheet names.

    3. Use purrr::map() and purrr::list_rbind() to read multiple files into one data frame.

      path <- "your_file_path.xlsx"
      path |> 
        excel_sheets() |>
        set_names() |>
        map(read_excel, path = path) |>
        list_rbind()

readxl column specification

  • Column specifications define what data type each column of a file will be imported as.

  • Use the col_types argument of read_excel() to set the column specification.

  • Guess column types: To guess a column type, read_excel() looks at the first 1000 rows of data. Increase with the guess_max argument.

    read_excel(path, guess_max = Inf)
  • Set all columns to same type, e.g. character:

    read_excel(path, col_types = "text")
  • Set each column individually:

    read_excel(
      path,
      col_types = c("text", "guess", "guess","numeric")
    )
  • Column types:

    Table with 5 columns. Column headers are various data types (logical, numeric, text, date, and list). The data in two rows show examples of data for the given column type.
    logical numeric text date list
    TRUE 2 hello 1947-01-08 hello
    FALSE 3.45 world 1956-10-21 1
    • skip

    • guess

    • logical

    • date

    • numeric

    • text

    • Use listfor columns that include multiple data types. See tidyr and purrr for list-column data.

Other useful Excel packages

  • For functions to write data to Excel files: openxlsx and writexl
  • For working with non-tabular Excel data: tidyxl

Import spreadsheets with googlesheets4

Read sheets

Read a sheet from a URL, a Sheet ID, or a dribble samefrom the googledrive package. See Useful read arguments for more read arguments.

read_sheet(ss, sheet = NULL, range = NULL)

Same as range_read().

  • If the Google sheet you want to import is the following:

    Spreadsheet with 5 columns (A through E) and three rows. First row reads x1 through x5. Second and third row have some missing values.
    A B C D E
    x1 x2 x3 x4 x5
    x z 8
    y 7 9 10
  • It will look like the following when imported:

Sheet metadata

  • URLs are in the form:

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/
                SPREADSHEET_ID/edit#gid=SHEET_ID
  • Get spreadsheet meta data: gs4_get(ss)

  • Get data on all spreadsheet files: gs4_find(...)

  • Get a tibble of properties for each worksheet: sheet_properties(ss). Also sheet_names().

Write sheets

  • write_sheet(data, ss = NULL, sheet = NULL): Write a data frame into a new or existing Sheet. 
  • gs4_create(name, ..., sheets = NULL): Create a new Sheet with a vector of names, a data frame, or a (named) list of data frames.
  • sheet_append(ss, data, sheet = 1): Add rows to the end of a worksheet.

googlesheets4 column specification

Column specifications define what data type each column of a file will be imported as.

Use the col_types argument of read_sheet()/range_read() to set the column specification.

  • Guess column types: To guess a column type read_sheet()/range_read() looks at the first 1000 rows of data. Increase with guess_max.

    read_sheet(path, guess_max = Inf)
  • Set all columns to same type, e.g. character:

    read_sheet(path, col_types = "c")
  • Set each column individually:

    # col types: skip, guess, integer, logical, character
    read_sheets(ss, col_types = "_?ilc")
  • Column types:

    • skipped my lunch 🥙 🍱 and: “_” or “-”

    • guess: “?”

    • logical: “l”

    • integer: “i”

    • double: “d”

    • numeric: “n”

    • date: “D”

    • datetime: “T”

    • character: “c”

    • list-column: “L”

    • cell: “C” (returns list of raw cell data)

    • Use list for columns that include multiple data types. See tidyr and purrr for list-column data.

File level operations

  • googlesheets4 also offers ways to modify other aspects of Sheets (e.g. freeze rows, set column width, manage (work)sheets). Go to googlesheets4.tidyverse.org to read more.
  • For whole-file operations (e.g. renaming, sharing, placing within a folder), see the tidyverse package googledrive at googledrive.tidyverse.org.

Cell specification for readxl and googlesheets4

Use the range argument of readxl::read_excel() or googlesheets4::read_sheet() to read a subset of cells from a sheet.

read_excel(path, range = "Sheet1!B1:D2")
read_sheet(ss, range = "B1:D2")

Also use the range argument with cell specification functions cell_limits(), cell_rows(), cell_cols(), and anchored().


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Updated: 2024-05.

packageVersion("readr")
[1] '2.1.5'
packageVersion("readxl")
[1] '1.4.3'
packageVersion("googlesheets4")
[1] '1.1.1'