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180

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2

As part of a larger task performed in R run under windows, I would like to copy selected files between directories. Is it possible to give within R a command like "cp patha/filea*.csv pathb" (notice the wildcard, for extra spice)?

+5  A: 

You can

  • use system() to fire off a command as if it was on shell, incl globbing
  • use list.files() aka dir() to do the globbing / reg.exp matching yourself and the copy the files individually
  • use file.copy on individual files as shown in mjv's answer
Dirk Eddelbuettel
+6  A: 

I don't think there is a direct way (shy of shelling-out), but something like the following usually works for me.

flist <- list.files("patha", "^filea.+[.]csv$", full.names = TRUE)
file.copy(flist, "pathb")

Notes:

  • I purposely decomposed in two steps, they can be combined.
  • See the regular expression: R uses true regex, and also separates the file pattern from the path, in two separate arguments.
  • note the ^ and $ (beg/end of string) in the regex, this is a common gotcha, as these are implicit to wildcard-type patterns, but required with regexes (lest some file names which match the wildcard pattern but also start and/or end with additional text be selected as well).
  • In the Windows world, people will typically add the ignore.case = TRUE argument to list.files, in order to emulate the fact that directory searches are case insensitive with this OS.
  • R's glob2rx() function provides a convenient way to convert wildcard patterns to regular expressions. For example fpattern = glog2rx('filea*.csv') returns a different but equivalent regex.
mjv
I think the pattern should be `"^filea.+[.]csv"`.
Marek
@Marek: right you are! Also, in particular in the Windows world, peopole will typically want to add the argument `ignore.case = TRUE`. I edited accordingly, thanks.
mjv
you can use ?glob2rx to convert from wildcards to regexes.
Eduardo Leoni
@Edurardo Leoni: yes, you can. The nice, if only occasionally unsettling, thing about R is that you keep discovering ways of doing things. It's the first I heard about glob2rx in R; I typically write my regexes longhand (which btw for the globbing patterns isn't that hard), but yeah, glob2rx() works. I'll add this to the notes in the answer.
mjv