I have a .csv
data, and I could view it from a webpage, but when I read it into R
, some of the data couldn't be showed. The data is available here home.ustc.edu.cn/~lanrr/data.csv
mydata = read.csv("http://home.ustc.edu.cn/~lanrr/data.csv", header = T)
View(mydata) # show something like this:
# 9:39:37 665 600160 ���ɷ� ���� ���� 8.050 100 805.00 ��ȯ �ɽ�
��ȯ���� E004017669 665
2 9:39:38 697 930 �������� ���� ���� 4.360 283 1233.88
���� �ɽ� ����Ʒ���� 680001369 697
The data contains some Chinese words, but I don't if I need to change the encode or do some other things, has anyone meet this problem before?
mydata = read.csv("http://home.ustc.edu.cn/~lanrr/data.csv",
encoding = "UTF-8", header = T, stringsAsFactors = F)
View(mydata)
# 9:39:37 665 600160 <U+00BE><U+07BB><U+00AF><U+00B9><U+0277><dd> <c2><f4>
<U+00B3><f6> <c2><f2><c2><f4> 8.050 100 805.00 <c8><da><U+022F>
<U+00B3><U+027D><U+00BB> <c8><da><U+022F><c2><f4><U+00B3><f6> E004017669 665
2 9:39:38 697 930 <d6><d0><U+0078><c9><fa><U+00BB><U+00AF> <c2><f4>
<U+00B3><f6> <c2><f2><c2><f4> 4.360 283 1233.88 <d0><c5><d3><c3>
<U+00B3><U+027D><U+00BB> <U+00B5><U+00A3><U+00B1><U+00A3><U+01B7><c2><f4><U+00B3>
<f6> 680001369 697
sessionInfo()
# R version 2.15.2 (2012-10-26)
Platform: x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu (64-bit)
locale:
[1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC=C LC_TIME=en_US.UTF-8
LC_COLLATE=en_US.UTF-8
[5] LC_MONETARY=en_US.UTF-8 LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8 LC_PAPER=C
LC_NAME=C
[9] LC_ADDRESS=C LC_TELEPHONE=C LC_MEASUREMENT=en_US.UTF-8
LC_IDENTIFICATION=C
attached base packages:
[1] compiler stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods base
other attached packages:
[1] data.table_1.8.8 TTR_0.22-0 xts_0.9-3 zoo_1.7-9
timeDate_2160.97 Matrix_1.0-9 lattice_0.20-10
loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
[1] grid_2.15.2 tools_2.15.2
I do it in this way finally:
Sys.setlocale("LC_COLLATE", "Chinese")
Sys.setlocale("LC_CTYPE", "Chinese")
Sys.setlocale("LC_MONETARY", "Chinese")
Sys.setlocale("LC_TIME", "Chinese")
Sys.setlocale("LC_MESSAGES", "Chinese")
Sys.setlocale("LC_MEASUREMENT", "Chinese")
You could utilize read.csv with encoding UTF-8:
df <-read.csv("data.csv", encoding="UTF-8", stringsAsFactors=FALSE)
to make the Chinese letters Characters and not Factors.
Note: I don't have the Chinese language pack installed in my environment so I can not determine if the garbled characters in the .csv you provided are corrupted or unrecognized.