Importing data using textscan from a large dataset

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Sebastiano delre
Sebastiano delre el 26 de Mayo de 2016
Comentada: Sebastiano delre el 30 de Mayo de 2016
I would like to import data from a csv file. The data looks like in the example attached. There are 14 variables, with a header in the first row. NA indicates empty values. I would like variables 1-11 and 13 to be numeric, whereas variables 12 and 14 to be string. Notice that in the example.csv file only variables 2, 3 and 13 are written as numeric. The file is very big (3.5 GB), I would like to import data efficiently. Thank you for your help.
  4 comentarios
Stephen23
Stephen23 el 26 de Mayo de 2016
Editada: Stephen23 el 26 de Mayo de 2016
This question is a continuation of this discussion:
@Sebastiano delre: it is useful for us volunteers when you put links to earlier questions on the same topic, then we know what information and code you have already been given, what you have already tried, and what explanation you have given. It makes our job easier!
Sebastiano delre
Sebastiano delre el 26 de Mayo de 2016
Editada: Sebastiano delre el 26 de Mayo de 2016
Yes, it is. Nevertheless, things are a bit different. And the example file is significantly different.

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per isakson
per isakson el 26 de Mayo de 2016
Editada: per isakson el 28 de Mayo de 2016
Who created this file? I know there isn't a strict csv-standard. Anyhow after some trial and error, I came up with this format string on R2013b
>> str = '"7",746540138,9,"573348359","78599","1341119513","573346802","3","0","0","1341111281","-2,-1,-1",-1.33333333333333,"world, asia"';
>> cac = textscan( str, '"%f",%f,%f,"%f","%f","%f","%f","%f","%f","%f","%f","%[^"]",%f,"%[^"]"' )
cac =
Columns 1 through 9
[7] [746540138] [9] [573348359] [78599] [1.3411e+09] [573346802] [3] [0]
Columns 10 through 14
[0] [1.3411e+09] {1x1 cell} [-1.3333] {1x1 cell}
>> cac{14}
ans =
'world, asia'
  • "The file is very big (3.5 GB)" &nbsp asks for a big enough physical memory (RAM).
  • add 'TreatAsEmpty','NA'
  • "%[^"]" because I failed to make %q work (with R2013b)
  • " I would like to import data efficiently" &nbsp I guess textscan is the most efficient way.
  • It should (my reading of the documentation) work to remove the commas, ",", from the format string and add 'Delimiter',','. You might want to try. However, I failed.
&nbsp
Continuation a day later:
The format string above returns error rather than empty for ,"",. Work around: Treating " as a whitespace character or replace it by space isn't feasible because of strings like "-2,-1,-1". Replacing "" by "NA" seems to work.
>> cac = cssm( 'example.csv' )
cac =
[9x11 double] {9x1 cell} [9x1 double] {9x1 cell}
>> cac{1}(:,7)
ans =
NaN
NaN
573315745
NaN
NaN
NaN
573346802
573315745
NaN
where
function cac = cssm( filespec )
str = fileread( filespec );
str = strrep( str, '""', '"NA"' );
%
frm = '"%f",%f,%f,"%f","%f","%f","%f","%f","%f","%f","%f","%[^"]",%f,"%[^"]"';
cac = textscan( str, frm, 'HeaderLines',1, 'TreatAsEmpty',{'NA'}, 'CollectOutput',true );
end
This approach requires a large physical memory. However, mapreduce, Programming technique for analyzing data sets that do not fit in memory, which was Introduced in R2014b, might make it possible to modify the function, cssm, to run with less memory.

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