Read and write SPSS files
read_sav()
reads both .sav
and .zsav
files; write_sav()
creates
.zsav
files when compress = TRUE
. read_por()
reads .por
files.
read_spss()
uses either read_por()
or read_sav()
based on the
file extension.
read_sav( file, encoding = NULL, user_na = FALSE, col_select = NULL, skip = 0, n_max = Inf, .name_repair = "unique" ) read_por( file, user_na = FALSE, col_select = NULL, skip = 0, n_max = Inf, .name_repair = "unique" ) write_sav(data, path, compress = FALSE) read_spss( file, user_na = FALSE, col_select = NULL, skip = 0, n_max = Inf, .name_repair = "unique" )
file |
Either a path to a file, a connection, or literal data (either a single string or a raw vector). Files ending in Literal data is most useful for examples and tests. It must contain at least one new line to be recognised as data (instead of a path) or be a vector of greater than length 1. Using a value of |
encoding |
The character encoding used for the file. The default,
|
user_na |
If |
col_select |
One or more selection expressions, like in
|
skip |
Number of lines to skip before reading data. |
n_max |
Maximum number of lines to read. |
.name_repair |
Treatment of problematic column names:
This argument is passed on as |
data |
Data frame to write. |
path |
Path to a file where the data will be written. |
compress |
If |
Currently haven can read and write logical, integer, numeric, character
and factors. See labelled_spss()
for how labelled variables in
SPSS are handled in R.
A tibble, data frame variant with nice defaults.
Variable labels are stored in the "label" attribute of each variable. It is not printed on the console, but the RStudio viewer will show it.
write_sav()
returns the input data
invisibly.
path <- system.file("examples", "iris.sav", package = "haven") read_sav(path) tmp <- tempfile(fileext = ".sav") write_sav(mtcars, tmp) read_sav(tmp)
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