hex format 2005-04-08 - By Duncan Murdoch
Earl F. Glynn wrote:
>I recently discovered R's writeBin and readBin functions. readBin, in >particular, looks like an extremely powerful tool for loading external >files. This might be an easier way to perform some one-time data >manipulations instead of writing a separate C, Perl or Delphi program to >manipulate data before bringing it into R for analysis. > >readBin returns a "raw" data type that looks like an array of bytes that R >displays in hex. That's where my problem begins and why I joined this "hex >format" thread. > > That's only one possibility. readBin can return a number of different types.
>I'd love to manipulate this raw hex data, but R makes using these hex bytes >quite difficult to use (or more difficult than I think it should be based on >how easy it is in other languages). I might want to interpret a byte, or a >string of bytes, as characters. > A simple solution to this would be to implement a "raw connection", that takes a raw variable and lets you read it using readBin.
> Or, I might want to interpret pairs of >bytes as 2-byte unsigned (or possibly signed) integers. Or, I might want to >interpret 3-bytes at a time as RGB values (in either RGB or BGR order). Or, >I might want to interpret 8-bytes at a type as a IEEE754 floating point >number. > >Every time someone wants to manipulate this raw data in R, as far as I can >tell now, one must start from scratch and do all sorts of manipulations on >these hex byte values to get characters, or integers, or doubles. And >because it's not that easy (but it's not that hard either, more of an >annoyance), I guess many just go back to C to get that job done there and >then return to R. > > Currently you can do it by writing the raw data out to a temporary file and reading it back in. It would be nice to allow this to happen without the temporary file.
Duncan Murdoch
______________________________________________ R-help@(protected) mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide! http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
|
|