Read lines by number from a large file
I have a file with 15 million lines 开发者_开发技巧(will not fit in memory). I also have a small vector of line numbers - the lines that I want to extract.
How can I read-out the lines in one pass?
I was hoping for a C function that does it on one pass.
The trick is to use connection AND open it before read.table
:
con<-file('filename')
open(con)
read.table(con,skip=5,nrow=1) #6-th line
read.table(con,skip=20,nrow=1) #27-th line
...
close(con)
You may also try scan
, it is faster and gives more control.
If it's a binary file
Some discussion is here: Reading in only part of a Stata .DTA file in R
If it's a CSV or other text file
If they are contiguous and at the top of the file, just use the ,nrows
argument to read.csv
or any of the read.table
family. If not, you can combine the ,nrows
and the ,skip
arguments to repeatedly call read.csv
(reading in a new row or group of contiguous rows with each call) and then rbind
the results together.
If your file has fixed line lengths then you can use 'seek' to jump to any character position. So just jump to N * line_length for each N you want, and read one line.
However, from the R docs:
Use of seek on Windows is discouraged. We have found so many
errors in the Windows implementation of file positioning that
users are advised to use it only at their own risk, and asked not
to waste the R developers' time with bug reports on Windows'
deficiencies.
You can also use 'seek' from the standard C library in C, but I don't know if the above warning also applies!
Before I was able to get an R solution/answer, I've done it in Ruby:
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
NUM_SEQS = 14024829
linenumbers = (1..10).collect{(rand * NUM_SEQS).to_i}
File.open("./data/uniprot_2011_02.tab") do |f|
while line = f.gets
print line if linenumbers.include? f.lineno
end
end
runs fast (as fast as my storage can read the file).
I compile a solution based on the discussions here.
scan(filename,what=list(NULL),sep='\n',blank.lines.skip = F)
This will only show you number of lines but will read in nothing. If you really want to skip the blank lines, you could just set the last argument to TRUE.
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