Dear Ajay Ohri,
Re:
> Dear List,
>
> Say I can use getwd() and setwd() to change my working directory. How can I
> read in all the files within that directory using command line (like a ls()
> but for the path specified)
>
I use this function,
# functions
getFolder <- function(pat)
{
Either dir() or list.files()
Michael
On Jul 4, 2012, at 8:24 AM, Ajay Ohri wrote:
> Dear List,
>
> Say I can use getwd() and setwd() to change my working directory. How can I
> read in all the files within that directory using command line (like a ls()
> but for the path specified)
>
> Regard
On Jul 4, 2012, at 15:24 , Ajay Ohri wrote:
> Dear List,
>
> Say I can use getwd() and setwd() to change my working directory. How can I
> read in all the files within that directory using command line (like a ls()
> but for the path specified)
Something like
all <- lapply(list.files(), read.
How you "read all ... files" is up to you, as that depends both on the type of
data contained in the files and on how you plan to use the data.
Most likely the solution will involve using the files.list function and either
lapply or a for loop, and the data will end up stored in a list of data
Dear List,
Say I can use getwd() and setwd() to change my working directory. How can I
read in all the files within that directory using command line (like a ls()
but for the path specified)
Regards
Ajay
Websites-
Technology
http://decisionstats.com
[[alternative HTML version deleted]]
Dear List,
Say I can use getwd() and setwd() to change my working directory. How can I
read in all the files within that directory using command line (like a ls()
but for the path specified)
Regards
Ajay
Websites-
Technology
http://decisionstats.com
On Wed, Jul 4, 2012 at 3:30 PM, wrote:
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