Below are the scripts
> library(sqldf)
> turnover = read.csv("turnover.csv")
> names(turnover)
[1] "Report.Date" "PersID" "Status" "DOB"
[5] "Age" "Tenure" "Current.Hire.Date" "Term.Date"
[9] "Gender" "Function" "Grade" "Job.Category"
[13] "City" "State" "Retiree" "Race"
> turnover_hiredate = sqldf("select Status, Current.Hire.Date from turnover")
I get an error msg: no such column: Current.Hire.Date. But this variable is listed as the 7th variable.
What did I do wrong?
There is no need to change column names.
Starting with RSQLite 1.0.0 and sqldf 0.4-9 dots in column names are no longer translated to underscores. https://code.google.com/p/sqldf/
We only need to write the SQL statement between single quotes, and the column names including dots between double quotes or backticks/backquotes interchangeably.
Two examples:
require(sqldf)
# 1
turnover <- data.frame(Status = c("A", "B", "C"),
Current.Hire.Date = c("4/10/10", "13/11/10", "1/7/13"))
sqldf('select Status, "Current.Hire.Date" from turnover')
#2. Double quotes and backticks interchangeably
sqldf('select Species, avg("Sepal.Length") `Sepal.Length`,
avg("Sepal.Width") `Sepal.Width` from iris group by Species')
One more way to achieve the solution
#3 Using square brackets
sqldf('select Species, avg([Sepal.Length]) `Sepal.Length`,
avg([Sepal.Width]) `Sepal.Width` from iris group by Species')