This method could be used to export an object of class prevR in different formats (text, shapefile, dbase...)
Usage
# S4 method for class 'prevR'
export(
object,
element,
format,
file,
N = NULL,
R = NULL,
clusters.only = FALSE,
ext = NULL,
sep = NULL,
dec = NULL,
...
)
Arguments
- object
object of class prevR.
- element
element to export: "clusters" or "boundary".
- format
format: "dbf", "txt", csv", "csv2" or "shp" (unused if
element = "boundary"
).- file
file name without extension.
- N
integer or list of integers setting elements of
rings
to export (unused ifelement="boundary"
).- R
integer or list of integers setting elements of
rings
to export (unused ifelement="boundary"
).- clusters.only
export only the slot
clusters
ofobject
(unused ifelement="boundary"
)?- ext
coerce the extension of the export file (unused if
element="boundary"
or ifformat="shp"
).- sep
coerce the field separator string (unused if
element="boundary"
or ifformat="shp"
or ifformat="dbf"
).- dec
coerce the string to use for decimal point (unused if
element="boundary"
or ifformat="shp"
or ifformat="dbf"
).- ...
additional arguments transmitted to sf::st_write,
foreign::write.dbf()
orutils::write.table()
.
Details
If element="boundary"
, the slot boundary
of
object
will be exported as a shapefile.
Otherwise, the slot clusters
, merged with the slot rings
,
will be exported.
See as.data.frame()
for details on the use of the parameters of N
,
R
et clusters.only
.
format
specifies the export format of the data frame returned by
as.data.frame()
:
"shp" | Shape File |
"dbf" | DBASE format |
"txt" | tabulated text |
"csv" | 'comma separated values' |
"csv2" | CSV variant using a semicolon as field separator |
ext
could be used to coerce the extension of the output file,
except for shapefile export, which will write four different files
(.shp, .shx, .dbf and .prj).
The "txt" format uses by default a tabulation as field separator and a point "." for decimal point.
The "csv" format uses a comma "," as field separator and a point "." as decimal point.
The "csv2" format is a variant using a semicolon ";" as field separator and a colon "," for decimal point, the Excel convention for CSV files in some Western European locales.
sep
and dec
could be used to coerce the field separator and
the decimal point (together with the "txt" format).