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I downloaded a file . dat which is basically an array with data.
However, it seems to me that the only way to work with him is by doing the following command (I’m using the R and I don’t have much experience with the R):
setwd("C:")
load("dat73_1")
After this command "load" this file is "hidden" by R??
The code to read this file is as follows::
mylist<-c("CAN","FRA","DEU","ITA","JPN","GBR","G6")
If I want the information regarding "CAN", just modify "cno in 1:7" for "cno in 1:1".
for (cno in 1:7){
init_date<-c(1973,3)
start_date <- init_date+c(6,3)
end_date<-c(2009,10)
country<-mylist[cno]
Cdat<-data.frame(window(ts(get(country),start=init_date,freq=12),start=start_date, end=end_date))}
I did this and managed to recover this file to all countries of mylist and created a new file in Excel. But I can’t adapt the code to the excel file. There is how to do this?
If I can "find" this file. dat tbm would help a lot.
OBS (Edited): When I use the read.table command the output is this (Rstudio):

To read dat files, you use the read.table(file) function. Only checks if you need to use other arguments, such as header=T, if you want the original column names and Skip=number of rows to avoid. Dat files usually have extra information, so the Skip argument serves to ignore them.
– José
@Jose thanks!. I edited the theme to show the output when I use the read.table. command I can’t pull right.
– Laura
load()should be used in binary filesRextended.RDAor.Rdata, shouldn’t be what you need.– Tomás Barcellos
Hi, @Laura. You know which program generated this file
.data? From what I saw of the result after using theread.table()it seems to me that your file is binary (but not in format.RData, that could be read by the functionload()). Files like this usually require a treatment outside the R to be converted into a data table in format.csvor.txt, for example. Only then can they be read with the functionread.table()within the R.– Luís Muniz
put the example file here
– Artur_Indio