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Description
This is the main generator for S4 class RxSqlServerData, which extends RxDataSource.
Usage
RxSqlServerData(table = NULL, sqlQuery = NULL, connectionString = NULL,
rowBuffering = TRUE, returnDataFrame = TRUE, stringsAsFactors = FALSE,
colClasses = NULL, colInfo = NULL, rowsPerRead = 50000, verbose = 0,
useFastRead = TRUE, server = NULL, databaseName = NULL,
user = NULL, password = NULL, writeFactorsAsIndexes = FALSE)
## S3 method for class `RxSqlServerData':
head (x, n = 6L, reportProgress = 0L, ... )
## S3 method for class `RxSqlServerData':
tail (x, n = 6L, addrownums = TRUE, reportProgress = 0L, ... )
Arguments
table
NULL or character string specifying the table name. Cannot be used with sqlQuery.
sqlQuery
NULL or character string specifying a valid SQL select query. Cannot contain hidden characters such as tabs or newlines. Cannot be used with table. If you want to use TABLESAMPLE clause in sqlQuery, set rowBuffering argument to FALSE.
connectionString
NULL or character string specifying the connection string.
rowBuffering
logical specifying whether or not to buffer rows on read from the database. If you are having problems with your ODBC driver, try setting this to FALSE.
returnDataFrame
logical indicating whether or not to convert the result from a list to a data frame (for use in rxReadNext only). If FALSE, a list is returned.
stringsAsFactors
logical indicating whether or not to automatically convert strings to factors on import. This can be overridden by specifying "character" in colClasses and colInfo. If TRUE, the factor levels will be coded in the order encountered. Since this factor level ordering is row dependent, the preferred method for handling factor columns is to use colInfo with specified "levels".
colClasses
character vector specifying the column types to use when converting the data. The element names for the vector are used to identify which column should be converted to which type.
Allowable column types are:
"logical"(stored asuchar),"integer"(stored asint32),"float32"(the default for floating point data for .xdf files),"numeric"(stored asfloat64as in R),"character"(stored asstring),"factor"(stored asuint32),"int16"(alternative to integer for smaller storage space),"uint16"(alternative to unsigned integer for smaller storage space),"Date"(stored as Date, i.e.float64)
Note for
"factor"type, the levels will be coded in the order encountered. Since this factor level ordering is row dependent, the preferred method for handling factor columns is to usecolInfowith specified"levels".Note that equivalent types share the same bullet in the list above; for some types we allow both 'R-friendly' type names, as well as our own, more specific type names for .xdf data.
Note also that specifying the column as a "factor" type is currently equivalent to "string" - for the moment, if you wish to import a column as factor data you must use the
colInfoargument, documented below.
colInfo
list of named variable information lists. Each variable information list contains one or more of the named elements given below. The information supplied for colInfo overrides that supplied for colClasses.
- Currently available properties for a column information list are:
type- character string specifying the data type for the column. SeecolClassesargument description for the available types. Specify"factorIndex"as thetypefor 0-based factor indexes.levelsmust also be specified.newName- character string specifying a new name for the variable.description- character string specifying a description for the variable.levels- character vector containing the levels whentype = "factor". If the levels property is not provided, factor levels will be determined by the values in the source column. If levels are provided, any value that does not match a provided level will be converted to a missing value.newLevels- new or replacement levels specified for a column of type "factor". It must be used in conjunction with thelevelsargument. After reading in the original data, the labels for each level will be replaced with thenewLevels.low- the minimum data value in the variable (used in computations using theF()function.high- the maximum data value in the variable (used in computations using theF()function.
rowsPerRead
number of rows to read at a time.
verbose
integer value. If 0, no additional output is printed. If 1, information on the odbc data source type (odbc or odbcFast) is printed.
...
additional arguments to be passed directly to the underlying functions.
x
an RxSqlServerData object
n
positive integer. Number of rows of the data set to extract.
addrownums
logical. If TRUE, row numbers will be created to match the original data set.
reportProgress
integer value with options:
0: no progress is reported.1: the number of processed rows is printed and updated.2: rows processed and timings are reported.3: rows processed and all timings are reported.
useFastRead
logical specifying whether or not to use a direct ODBC connection. On Linux systems, this is the only ODBC connection available. Note: useFastRead = FALSE is currently not supported in writing to SQL Server data source.
server
Target SQL Server instance. Can also be specified in the connection string with the Server keyword.
databaseName
Database on the target SQL Server instance. Can also be specified in the connection string with the Database keyword.
user
SQL login to connect to the SQL Server instance. SQL login can also be specified in the connection string with the uid keyword.
password
Password associated with the SQL login. Can also be specified in the connection string with the pwd keyword.
writeFactorsAsIndexes
logical. If TRUE, when writing to an RxOdbcData data source, underlying factor indexes will be written instead of the string representations.
Details
The tail method is not functional for this data source type and will report an error.
The user and password arguments take precedence over
equivalent information provided within the connectionString argument. If, for
example, you provide the user name in both the connectionString and user
arguments, the one in connectionString is ignored.
Value
object of class RxSqlServerData.
Author(s)
Microsoft Corporation Microsoft Technical Support
See Also
RxSqlServerData-class, rxNewDataSource, rxImport.
Examples
## Not run:
# Create an RxSqlServerData data source
# Note: for improved security, read connection string from a file, such as
# sqlServerConnString <- readLines("sqlServerConnString.txt")
sqlServerConnString <- "SERVER=hostname;DATABASE=RevoTestDB;UID=DBUser;PWD=Password;"
sqlServerDataDS <- RxSqlServerData(sqlQuery = "SELECT * FROM claims",
connectionString = sqlServerConnString)
# Create an xdf file name
claimsXdfFileName <- file.path(tempdir(), "importedClaims.xdf")
# Import the data into the xdf file
rxImport(sqlServerDataDS, claimsXdfFileName, overwrite = TRUE)
# Read xdf file into a data frame
claimsIn <- rxDataStep(claimsXdfFileName)
head(claimsIn)
## End(Not run)