Parse logicals, integers, and reals
Use parse_*()
if you have a character vector you want to parse. Use
col_*()
in conjunction with a read_*()
function to parse the
values as they're read in.
parse_logical(x, na = c("", "NA"), locale = default_locale(), trim_ws = TRUE) parse_integer(x, na = c("", "NA"), locale = default_locale(), trim_ws = TRUE) parse_double(x, na = c("", "NA"), locale = default_locale(), trim_ws = TRUE) parse_character(x, na = c("", "NA"), locale = default_locale(), trim_ws = TRUE) col_logical() col_integer() col_double() col_character()
x |
Character vector of values to parse. |
na |
Character vector of strings to interpret as missing values. Set this
option to |
locale |
The locale controls defaults that vary from place to place.
The default locale is US-centric (like R), but you can use
|
trim_ws |
Should leading and trailing whitespace be trimmed from each field before parsing it? |
Other parsers:
col_skip()
,
cols_condense()
,
cols()
,
parse_datetime()
,
parse_factor()
,
parse_guess()
,
parse_number()
,
parse_vector()
parse_integer(c("1", "2", "3")) parse_double(c("1", "2", "3.123")) parse_number("$1,123,456.00") # Use locale to override default decimal and grouping marks es_MX <- locale("es", decimal_mark = ",") parse_number("$1.123.456,00", locale = es_MX) # Invalid values are replaced with missing values with a warning. x <- c("1", "2", "3", "-") parse_double(x) # Or flag values as missing parse_double(x, na = "-")
Please choose more modern alternatives, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.