Thank you. The line of code you give certainly resolves several of the issues. I didn't realize that font support is such a tough matter to realize. Let me express my gratitude to those who provide this for us in R. On 04-05-11, Prof Brian Ripley <rip...@stats.ox.ac.uk> wrote:
Oh, please! This is about the contributed package XML, not R and not Windows. Some of us have worked very hard to provide reasonable font support in R, including on Windows. We are given exceedingly little credit, just the brickbats for things for which we are not responsible. (We even work hard to port XML to Windows for you, again with almost zero credit.) That URL is a page in UTF-8, as its header says. We have provided many ways to work with UTF-8 on Windows, but it seems readHTMLTable() is not making use of them. You need to run iconv() on the strings in your object (which as it has factors, are the levels). When you do so, you will discover that page contains characters not in your native charset (I presume, not having your locale). What you can do, in Rgui only, is for (n in names(Islands)) Encoding(levels(Islands[[n]])) <-"UTF-8" but likely there are still characters it will not know how to display. On Wed, 4 May 2011, R.T.A.J.Leenders wrote: > > WinXP-x32, R-21.13.0 > Dear list, > I have a problem that (I think) relates to the interaction between Windows > and R. > I am trying to scrape a table with data on the Hawai'ian Islands, This is my > code: > library(XML) > u <- "[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaii" > tables <- readHTMLTable(u) > Islands <- tables[[5]] > The output is (first set of columns): > Island Nickname > > Islands > Island Nickname > Location >1 HawaiÃ?ûi[7] The Big Island 19Ã?ð34âÀòN 155Ã?ð30âÀòWïûÿ / ïûÿ19.567 >Ã?ðN 155.5Ã?ðWïûÿ / 19.567; -155.5 >2 Maui[8] The Valley Isle 20Ã?ð48âÀòN 156Ã?ð20âÀòWïûÿ / ïûÿ20.8Ã?ðN >156.333Ã?ðWïûÿ / 20.8; -156.333 >3 KahoÃ?ûolawe[9] The Target Isle 20Ã?ð33âÀòN 156Ã?ð36âÀòWïûÿ / ïûÿ20.55 >Ã?ðN 156.6Ã?ðWïûÿ / 20.55; -156.6 >4 LÃ?naÃ?ûi[10] The Pineapple Isle 20Ã?ð50âÀòN 156Ã?ð56âÀòWïûÿ / ïûÿ20.833Ã?ðN 15 >6.933Ã?ðWïûÿ / 20.833; -156.933 >5 MolokaÃ?ûi[11] The Friendly Isle 21Ã?ð08âÀòN 157Ã?ð02âÀòWïûÿ / ïûÿ21.133Ã?ðN 1 >57.033Ã?ðWïûÿ / 21.133; -157.033 >6 OÃ?ûahu[12] The Gathering Place 21Ã?ð28âÀòN 157Ã?ð59âÀòWïûÿ / ïûÿ21.467Ã?ðN 1 >57.983Ã?ðWïûÿ / 21.467; -157.983 >7 KauaÃ?ûi[13] The Garden Isle 22Ã?ð05âÀòN 159Ã?ð30âÀòWïûÿ / ïûÿ22.083 >Ã?ðN 159.5Ã?ðWïûÿ / 22.083; -159.5 >8 NiÃ?ûihau[14] The Forbidden Isle 21Ã?ð54âÀòN 160Ã?ð10âÀòWïûÿ / ïûÿ21.9Ã?ðN >160.167Ã?ðWïûÿ / 21.9; -160.167 > > As you can see, there are "weird" characters in there. I have also tried > readHTMLTable(u, encoding = "UTF-16") and readHTMLTable(u, encoding = > "UTF-8") > but that didn't help. > It seems to me that there may be an issue with the interaction of the > Windows settings of the character set. > sessionInfo() gives > > sessionInfo() > R version 2.13.0 (2011-04-13) > Platform: i386-pc-mingw32/i386 (32-bit) > locale: > [1] LC_COLLATE=Dutch_Netherlands.1252 LC_CTYPE=Dutch_Netherlands.1252 > LC_MONETARY=Dutch_Netherlands.1252 > [4] LC_NUMERIC=C LC_TIME=Dutch_Netherlands.1252 > attached base packages: > [1] stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods base > other attached packages: > [1] XML_3.2-0.2 > > > I have also attempted to let R use another setting by entering: > Sys.setlocale("LC_ALL", "en_US.UTF-8"), but this yields the response: > > Sys.setlocale("LC_ALL", "en_US.UTF-8") > [1] "" > Warning message: > In Sys.setlocale("LC_ALL", "en_US.UTF-8") : > OS reports request to set locale to "en_US.UTF-8" cannot be honored > > > In addition, I have attempted to make the change directly from the windows > command prompt, using: "chcp 65001" and variations of that, but that didn't > change anything. > I have searched the list and the web and have found others bringing forth a > similar issues, but have not been able to find a solution. I looks like this > is an issue of how Windows and R interact. Unfortunately, all three > computers at my disposal have this problem. It occurs both under WinXP-x32 > and under Win7-x86. > Is there a way to make R override the windows settings or can the issue be > solved otherwise? > I have also tried other websites, and the issue occurs every time when there > is an é, ÃÂŒ, À, î, et cetera in the text-to-be-scraped. > Thank you, > Roger >______________________________________________ >R-help@r-project.org mailing list >[2]https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help >PLEASE do read the posting guide [3]http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html >and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. > -- Brian D. Ripley, rip...@stats.ox.ac.uk Professor of Applied Statistics, [4]http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~ripley/ University of Oxford, Tel: +44 1865 272861 (self) 1 South Parks Road, +44 1865 272866 (PA) Oxford OX1 3TG, UK Fax: +44 1865 272595 References 1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawaii 2. https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help 3. http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html 4. http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/%7Eripley/ ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.