Using Data Packages with R

R is a popular open-source programming language and platform for data analysis. Frictionless Data is an Open Knowledge International project aimed at making it easy to publish and load high-quality data into tools like R through the creation of a standard wrapper format called the Data Package.

In this post, I will demonstrate an in-progress version of datapkg, an R package that makes it easy to load Data Packages into your R environment by automating otherwise manual import steps using information provided in the Data Package descriptor file datapackage.json . datapkg was developed through a collaboration between Open Knowledge International and rOpenSci, an organization that specializes in creating open-source tools using R for advancing open science.

Loading Tabular Data in R

R’s core strengths as a data analysis framework lie in its support for a wide array of statistical tests, its straightforward, powerful options for static visualization, and the ease with which its functionality can be extended. For these reasons, R enjoys a vibrant online community who contribute daily to thousands of packages on CRAN. For this post, we will avoid going deep into what makes R so powerful, and instead focus on the typical first step in any data analysis project: loading source data. This post assumes you have a fairly basic understanding of R and a working R environment on your machine.

When loading tabular data from a file into an R environment, it is common to use the functions read.csv or read.delim . These are wrappers for the more generic read.table function that provide sane defaults for reading from commonly formatted CSV and tab-delimited files, respectively. These commands read data into what’s called a “data frame”, R’s basic data structure for storing data tables. In this structure, each column (“vector”) in the original tabular data file may be assigned a different type (e.g. string, integer, date).

As a simple example, let’s load a CSV file containing the CBOE Volatility Index using read.csv() . This dataset can be found on our example Data Packages repo in the subdirectory “finance-vix”. Once downloaded, we can set R’s working directory to where the data is stored and take a peek at the files within its data subdirectory:

setwd ( '/Users/dan/Downloads/example-data-packages-master/finance-vix' ) list.files ( "data" )

'vix-daily.csv'

We can read this single CSV, vix-daily , using R’s read.csv() function and assign its output to a data frame called volatility_raw . Afterwards, we can get a sample of the data by viewing the first few rows of the file using the head() function.

volatility_raw <- read.csv ( "data/vix-daily.csv" ) head ( volatility_raw )

Date VIXOpen VIXHigh VIXLow VIXClose 1 1/2/2004 17.96 18.68 17.54 18.22 2 1/5/2004 18.45 18.49 17.44 17.49 3 1/6/2004 17.66 17.67 16.19 16.73 4 1/7/2004 16.72 16.75 15.5 15.5 5 1/8/2004 15.42 15.68 15.32 15.61 6 1/9/2004 16.15 16.88 15.57 16.75

In the process of loading this data into a data frame, R made an educated guess as to the types of data found in each column. We can display those types by looking at the the “structure” of an R object using the str command.

str ( volatility_raw )

'data.frame': 3122 obs. of 5 variables: $ Date : Factor w/ 3122 levels "01/02/2014","01/02/2015",..: 543 644 652 659 666 672 493 501 508 515 ... $ VIXOpen : num 18 18.4 17.7 16.7 15.4 ... $ VIXHigh : num 18.7 18.5 17.7 16.8 15.7 ... $ VIXLow : num 17.5 17.4 16.2 15.5 15.3 ... $ VIXClose: num 18.2 17.5 16.7 15.5 15.6 ...

We can see that while R has correctly guessed the types of “VIXOpen”, “VIXHigh”, “VIXLow”, and “VIXClose” to be num , it has incorrectly guessed the type of the “Date” to be Factor when R has a much more appropriate type for the kind of data in this column called, predictably, Date . This is a problem easily demonstrable by attempting to plot the data.

plot ( volatility_raw $ Date , volatility_raw $ VIXOpen , type = 'l' )

What should be the steadily increasing Date on the X axis is, instead, out of order because the Date column is has not been assigned its correct type. In this very simple case, there is a straightforward fix which is to manually re-assign the Date column (in our data frame represented as volatility_raw$Date ) to a type Date passing the special format %m/%d/%Y which we found out by previewing the data. After this, we can revisit its structure using the str() command.

volatility_raw $ Date <- as.Date ( volatility_raw $ Date , "%m/%d/%Y" ) str ( volatility_raw )

'data.frame': 3122 obs. of 5 variables: $ Date : Date, format: "2004-01-02" "2004-01-05" ... $ VIXOpen : num 18 18.4 17.7 16.7 15.4 ... $ VIXHigh : num 18.7 18.5 17.7 16.8 15.7 ... $ VIXLow : num 17.5 17.4 16.2 15.5 15.3 ... $ VIXClose: num 18.2 17.5 16.7 15.5 15.6 ...

We have successfully given the Date column a Date type, and we should be able to run the same plot() function above and get a better result. While this is a good solution for this single dataset with a single incorrectly guessed column, it doesn’t scale well to multiple incorrectly guessed columns across multiple datasets. In addition, it only represents one type of manual task to be performed on a new set of data. We have designed the Data Package format to obviate this, and other kinds of tedious “data wrangling” tasks. In the next section, we will perform the same task above using the datapkg library.

Loading Tabular Data Packages in R

A Data Package is a specification for creating a “container” for transporting data by saving useful metadata in a specially formatted file. This file is called datapackage.json , and it is stored in the root of a directory containing a given dataset. When loading a Data Package, datapkg—the new R Data Package library developed by rOpenSci—reads this extra metadata in order to conveniently load high quality, well formatted data into your R environment.

Installing datapkg

Note: the Data Package library for R is still in testing and subject to change. For this reason, it is not yet on CRAN and must be installed from its GitHub repository using the devtools package.

To install, start your R environment and run the following commands:

install.packages ( "devtools" ) library ( devtools ) install_github ( "hadley/readr" ) install_github ( "ropenscilabs/jsonvalidate" ) install_github ( "frictionlessdata/datapackage-r" )

Reading Data

Revisiting our data directory, we can examine the files in the root using the list.files() function:

'data' 'datapackage.json'

The presence of the datapackage.json file indicates our current R working directory is points to a Data Package, so we can load the datapkg library and use the datapkg_read() function to read our Data Package (note: we can also pass a path or URL to this function).

library ( datapkg ) volatility <- datapkg_read ()

The datapkg_read() function reads not only the data in the dataset, but also the metadata stored with it. This metadata includes high level information like the author, source, and license of the dataset. We can inspect this information by reading various variables stored on this object. For instance, to get a fuller, human-readable title, we can access volatility$title or, if the Data Package has a “homepage” variable set, we can access it using volatility$homepage .

'VIX - CBOE Volatility Index' 'http://www.cboe.com/micro/VIX/'

datapkg_read() also uses schema information stored in the datapackage.json to facilitate the loading of data. As shown above, one misstep we encountered when loading a new dataset into R was neglecting to correct an incorrectly guessed column type. What the Data Package format provides is a simple, standard way to store that information with a dataset to automate this and other steps. The following snippet shows how the datapackage.json descibes this information:

" schema " : { " fields " : [ { " name " : " Date " , " type " : " date " , " format " : " fmt:%m/%d/%Y " }, { " name " : " VIXOpen " , " type " : " number " }, { " name " : " VIXHigh " , " type " : " number " }, { " name " : " VIXLow " , " type " : " number " }, { " name " : " VIXClose " , " type " : " number " } ] }

As above, we can verify that datapkg_read() used this information to construct its data frame by calling the str() function. The data variable on the volatility object created by datapkg_read() points to a list of files (“resources”) on the dataset; vix-daily is the name of the resource—expressed as a data frame—we want.

str ( volatility $ data $ `vix-daily` )

Classes ‘tbl_df’, ‘tbl’ and 'data.frame': 3122 obs. of 5 variables: $ Date : Date, format: "2004-01-02" "2004-01-05" ... $ VIXOpen : num 18 18.4 17.7 16.7 15.4 ... $ VIXHigh : num 18.7 18.5 17.7 16.8 15.7 ... $ VIXLow : num 17.5 17.4 16.2 15.5 15.3 ... $ VIXClose: num 18.2 17.5 16.7 15.5 15.6 ...

The output shows that the Date column has been set with the correct type. Because the type on the Date column has been set correctly, we can immediately plot the data.

vix.daily <- volatility $ data $ `vix-daily` plot ( vix.daily $ Date , vix.daily $ VIXOpen , type = 'l' )

Going Forward

This has been a very small example of the basic functionality of the R library. This software is still in testing, so if you are an R user and would like to use Data Packages to help manage your data in R, please let us know. You can leave a comment here on the forum.

To see the code used in this post, visit its Jupyter Notebook.

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