When I use the read.csv() function in R to load data, I often find that an X has been added to variable names. I think I just about always see it it in the first variable, but I could be wrong.

At first, I thought R might be doing this because I had a space at the beginning of the variable name - I don't.

Second, I had read somewhere that if you have a variable that starts with a number, or is a very short variable name, R would add the X. The variable name is all text and the length of the name of this variable is 12 characters, so it's not short.

Now, this is purely an annoyance. I can rename the column, but it does add a step, albeit a small one.

Is there a way to prevent this from rogue X from infiltrating my data frame?

Here is my original code:

df <- read.csv("/file/location.filecsv", header=T, sep=",")

Here is the variable in question:

str(orders)
'data.frame':   2620276 obs. of  26 variables:
 $ X.OrderDetailID    : Factor w/ 2620193 levels "(2620182 row(s) affected)",..: 105845
有帮助吗?

解决方案

read.table and read.csv have a check.names= argument that you can set to FALSE.

For example, try it with this input consisting of just a header:

> read.csv(text = "a,1,b")
[1] a  X1 b 
<0 rows> (or 0-length row.names)

versus

> read.csv(text = "a,1,b", check.names = FALSE)
[1] a 1 b
<0 rows> (or 0-length row.names)

其他提示

It is surprising behavior, but I think we would need a reproducible example. Perhaps you have some invisible/special characters hiding in your file?

names(read.csv(textConnection(
"abcdefghijkl, a1,2x")))

behaves fine. Can you make an example along these lines that demonstrates your problem?

As described in the other answer, check.names=FALSE is a possible workaround. You can experiment with make.names to determine the behavior ...

As Gabor said, by default read.csv deafults to converting the names in your header row to be valid variable names (use check.names = FALSE to turn this off). This is done using the function make.names. The help page for that function explains what constitutes a valid variable name.

A syntactically valid name consists of letters, numbers and the dot or underline characters and starts with a letter or the dot not followed by a number. Names such as ".2way" are not valid, and neither are the reserved words.

The list of reserved words is found on the help page ?reserved.

The other condition is that the variable name must be 10000 characters or less, but make.names won't shorten it. So be careful of being really verbose with your variable names.

You can check for valid variable names using

library(assertive.code)
is_valid_variable_name(x)
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